Contextualizing Narratives of Economic Growth and Navigating Problematic Data: Economic Trends in Ethiopia (1999–2017)

There are common narratives about economic growth in Ethiopia. We analyze four common narratives, namely, that (1) the economy is transforming from agriculture to industry, (2) that national economic growth has been rapid and sustained, (3) that Ethiopia’s economy is largely agricultural,...

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Main Authors: Logan Cochrane, Yeshtila W. Bekele
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-12-01
Series:Economies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/6/4/64
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spelling doaj-4a94d777539c40d497c02ba884f351ba2020-11-24T22:51:59ZengMDPI AGEconomies2227-70992018-12-01646410.3390/economies6040064economies6040064Contextualizing Narratives of Economic Growth and Navigating Problematic Data: Economic Trends in Ethiopia (1999–2017)Logan Cochrane0Yeshtila W. Bekele1Global and International Studies, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, CanadaInstitute of Policy and Development Research, Hawassa University, Hawassa 1558, EthiopiaThere are common narratives about economic growth in Ethiopia. We analyze four common narratives, namely, that (1) the economy is transforming from agriculture to industry, (2) that national economic growth has been rapid and sustained, (3) that Ethiopia’s economy is largely agricultural, and (4) that there is a looming debt crisis, largely due to lending from China. In many instances, the justification for these narratives is based upon single years or specific data points. We examine these narratives over the long term, to assess if they are supported by available macroeconomic data. In doing so, we encountered significant issues with data quality and consistency. This article presents the available datasets from 1999 to 2017 and concludes that the commonly made claims about the Ethiopian economy are sometimes accurate, sometimes incomplete, and other times inaccurate. We call for greater attention to primary data, and primary datasets, as opposed to relying upon secondary summaries, single years, or specific data points to make generalized claims.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/6/4/64Ethiopiaeconomygrowthtradeexportimportdebt
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Logan Cochrane
Yeshtila W. Bekele
spellingShingle Logan Cochrane
Yeshtila W. Bekele
Contextualizing Narratives of Economic Growth and Navigating Problematic Data: Economic Trends in Ethiopia (1999–2017)
Economies
Ethiopia
economy
growth
trade
export
import
debt
author_facet Logan Cochrane
Yeshtila W. Bekele
author_sort Logan Cochrane
title Contextualizing Narratives of Economic Growth and Navigating Problematic Data: Economic Trends in Ethiopia (1999–2017)
title_short Contextualizing Narratives of Economic Growth and Navigating Problematic Data: Economic Trends in Ethiopia (1999–2017)
title_full Contextualizing Narratives of Economic Growth and Navigating Problematic Data: Economic Trends in Ethiopia (1999–2017)
title_fullStr Contextualizing Narratives of Economic Growth and Navigating Problematic Data: Economic Trends in Ethiopia (1999–2017)
title_full_unstemmed Contextualizing Narratives of Economic Growth and Navigating Problematic Data: Economic Trends in Ethiopia (1999–2017)
title_sort contextualizing narratives of economic growth and navigating problematic data: economic trends in ethiopia (1999–2017)
publisher MDPI AG
series Economies
issn 2227-7099
publishDate 2018-12-01
description There are common narratives about economic growth in Ethiopia. We analyze four common narratives, namely, that (1) the economy is transforming from agriculture to industry, (2) that national economic growth has been rapid and sustained, (3) that Ethiopia’s economy is largely agricultural, and (4) that there is a looming debt crisis, largely due to lending from China. In many instances, the justification for these narratives is based upon single years or specific data points. We examine these narratives over the long term, to assess if they are supported by available macroeconomic data. In doing so, we encountered significant issues with data quality and consistency. This article presents the available datasets from 1999 to 2017 and concludes that the commonly made claims about the Ethiopian economy are sometimes accurate, sometimes incomplete, and other times inaccurate. We call for greater attention to primary data, and primary datasets, as opposed to relying upon secondary summaries, single years, or specific data points to make generalized claims.
topic Ethiopia
economy
growth
trade
export
import
debt
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/6/4/64
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