Ethiopia’s prime minister has appointed a team to advise his government on the privatisation of state-owned enterprises, his chief of staff said, as part of reforms the new leader has instituted since taking office four months ago.
Since becoming prime minister in April, 41-year-old Abiy Ahmed has turned Africa’s most populous after Nigeria on its head with his plans to reshape politics and the economy.
“PM Abiy Ahmed has set up an Advisory Council on the privatisation of large state-owned enterprises,” Fitsum Arega, Abiy’s chief of staff said on Twitter late on Friday.
“The Council will ensure the process is managed with utmost transparency and accountability.”
Abiy’s government has said that it is open to selling off a host of state-owned firms, either partially or entirely, as part of economic reforms designed to “unleash the potential of the private sector”.
The government was tendering for advice from global business consultancies including McKinsey and PwC, the country’s information minister said in July.
Ethiopia has achieved one of Africa’s fastest growth rates over the past decade, averaging up to 10 per cent a year, reports Reuters.
But investors complain about its stifling and antiquated socialist bureaucracy, where the default answer from fearful civil servants is “no” and importing something as mundane as cotton can take six or 12 months.
Besides his stated desire to attract foreign capital into one of Africa’s most closed states, Abiy has brokered peace with Eritrea, with whom Ethiopia fought a border war two decades ago.