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Should the African lion learn from the Asian tigers? A comparative-historical study of FDI-oriented industrial policy in Ethiopia, South Korea and Taiwan

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Abstract

Ethiopia’s economy has been growing at breakneck speed for well over a decade now, earning the nickname as Africa’s lion. In recent years, the development literature on Ethiopia has paid particular attention to the role of industrial policy, especially the ways in which the Ethiopian experience compares to that of the Asian tigers. But through this comparative-historical perspective, little attention has been devoted to an important aspect of industrial policy in Ethiopia – foreign direct investment (FDI) in the manufacturing sector. This paper compares FDI-oriented industrial policy in Ethiopia in the current era (particularly focusing on light manufacturing) to that of South Korea and Taiwan between 1960 and 1990, arguably the two most generalisable cases among the Asian tigers. The paper argues that FDI-oriented industrial policy in Ethiopia seems to be bringing about short-term economic benefits, and is showing promise for further industrialisation. At the same time, it could benefit from taking more lessons from the long-term economic development perspective that characterised South Korea’s and Taiwan’s approach to FDI. Such a long-term perspective most importantly includes pro-active strategies to transfer technology from foreign firms to the domestic economy and the creation of backward linkages from foreign to domestic firms.

Description

Keywords

Ethiopia, industrial policy, foreign direct investment, South Korea, Taiwan

Journal Title

Third World Quarterly

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0143-6597
1360-2241

Volume Title

40

Publisher

Informa UK Limited

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Funding for this research has been generously provided by the Cambridge Overseas Trust, Corpus Christi College at the University of Cambridge and the Gatsby Charitable Foundation.