Made in Africa: Industrial Policy in Ethiopia
Autor Arkebe Oqubayen Limba Engleză Hardback – 28 mai 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780198739890
ISBN-10: 0198739893
Pagini: 374
Ilustrații: 17 Figures and 44 Tables
Dimensiuni: 162 x 236 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.71 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0198739893
Pagini: 374
Ilustrații: 17 Figures and 44 Tables
Dimensiuni: 162 x 236 x 26 mm
Greutate: 0.71 kg
Editura: OUP OXFORD
Colecția OUP Oxford
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
As a senior official in the ruling regime for the last few decades, Oqubay has been one of the architects of its economic policy, and his book offers interesting insights into the leaderships ideas and motivations, especially when it comes to industry and exports.
Oqubay structures this book within a broad narrative that argues that industrial policy can work and, moreover, it can work in Africa. He looks in detail at three economic sectors: the cement industry (an import substitution industry); floriculture; and leather footwear and apparal (an export-oriented light industry).
gives readers a rare front-row assessment of an African country's industrial strategy since the early 2000s. Seamlessly blending theoretical knowledge, academic rigor and rich policy analysis, the book highlights Ethiopia's industrial transformational path ... The book makes a compelling case for how industrial policies can work and thrive in a low-income African country
This book combines sophisticated theories of industrial policy with a deep understanding of the policy process, which comes from the author's long experience in policy-making at the highest levels. This unusual combination has resulted in a framework for empirical analysis that is not only fully appreciative of structural dynamics and inter-sectoral linkages but also keenly aware of practical challenges policy implementation in terms of administrative capabilities, interest group politics, and institutional constraints. A unique, pathbreaking book.
Ethiopia is a development miracle in making, which will provide the inspiration, confidence, and experiences for other African countries, like the Japanese miracle in post WWII to East Asian countries. Dr Arkebe Oqubays Made in Africa: Industrial Policy in Ethiopia is a brilliant book. It provides first-hand insights with academic rigor about how Ethiopia kicked starting dynamic structural transformation and achieved double-digit growth in the past decade. Anyone concerned about the development in Africa and other poor countries in the world would be wise to read the book.
Solid transformation of the Ethiopian economy will generate its own industry of success attribution, but few will dispute that this book spells out succinctly and beautifully what is changing. There is no special secret as Arkebe rightly demonstrates: industrial policy is about a reform-minded government having a drive to make it happen; but also having the right cocktail of policies that generate the incentives in every front to make success possible. From agro-processing to light industrial production, from textiles to infrastructure servicing, Ethiopia has become a good case study for other countries to emulate. Be it through regulatory and macro incentives, be it through energy-centered investment, it demonstrates the need for coherence and eagerness to learn from other realities, particularly from Asia. A must read for the many Africans engaged in structural transformation.
This is a profoundly original book about the Ethiopian development experience which highlights the potential for, and constraints on, industrialization in Africa. It questions conventional wisdom to argue that industrial policy can work even in low-income countries, where the State performs a developmental role and has the space to make its own policy choices. The author recognizes that industrial policy is easier said than done, to focus on implementation as much as analysis, and emphasizes that even if outcomes are mixed there is learning from both successes and failures. This lucid and engaging book is an unusual blend of theory and policy, as Arkebe Oqubay combines careful scholarship with his rich experience as a policy practitioner. It is essential reading for scholars and practitioners in countries that are latecomers to industrialization.
Active and responsive industrial policy, trial-and-error attitude, and great attention to sectoral details proposed in this book are essentially East Asian. As a scholar and policy maker, Dr Arkebe has revealed to us what is going on in the mind-set of Ethiopian leaders, and why the country is growing fast and absorbing a large amount of light manufacturing investment from abroad.
This book arrives at a propitious moment. There is a growing recognition of the importance of industrialization in Africa and an expanding consensus on the need for industrial policy but a paucity of studies to map out the terrain of transformation. The volume provides detailed insights into the institutional configuration and political dynamics underlying industrial policy success and failures by an insider closely tied to the center of power in Ethiopia. The book is essential reading for policy makers, academics and students of the political economy of Ethiopian economic policy.
Arkebe Oqubay is the ultimate insider, yet he offers an admirably detached and balanced assessment of the ups and downs of Ethiopias industrial policies. His view of industrial policy is a sophisticated one. Successful intervention requires the right political and institutional framework. It demands a deep understanding of market opportunities, of supply-side problems and linkages across activities, and an appreciation of what government can and cannot do. And it depends, most crucially, on the governments capacity to implement the appropriate measures. This book will be essential reading for all those concerned with the process of industrialisation in developing countries.
Made in Africa is a case study of Ethiopia, but far more than a case study. It uses Ethiopia as the center of a thoughtful and wide-ranging discussion of the literature on the developmental state, trade policy, and industrialization-at-large, and celebrates the contributions of the more heterodox economists such as Hirschman, Rodrik, Amsden, Reinert, and those at the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). It is a model of its kind for economists and political scientists working on development issues around the world. What is more, it is beautifully written!
Oqubay structures this book within a broad narrative that argues that industrial policy can work and, moreover, it can work in Africa. He looks in detail at three economic sectors: the cement industry (an import substitution industry); floriculture; and leather footwear and apparal (an export-oriented light industry).
gives readers a rare front-row assessment of an African country's industrial strategy since the early 2000s. Seamlessly blending theoretical knowledge, academic rigor and rich policy analysis, the book highlights Ethiopia's industrial transformational path ... The book makes a compelling case for how industrial policies can work and thrive in a low-income African country
This book combines sophisticated theories of industrial policy with a deep understanding of the policy process, which comes from the author's long experience in policy-making at the highest levels. This unusual combination has resulted in a framework for empirical analysis that is not only fully appreciative of structural dynamics and inter-sectoral linkages but also keenly aware of practical challenges policy implementation in terms of administrative capabilities, interest group politics, and institutional constraints. A unique, pathbreaking book.
Ethiopia is a development miracle in making, which will provide the inspiration, confidence, and experiences for other African countries, like the Japanese miracle in post WWII to East Asian countries. Dr Arkebe Oqubays Made in Africa: Industrial Policy in Ethiopia is a brilliant book. It provides first-hand insights with academic rigor about how Ethiopia kicked starting dynamic structural transformation and achieved double-digit growth in the past decade. Anyone concerned about the development in Africa and other poor countries in the world would be wise to read the book.
Solid transformation of the Ethiopian economy will generate its own industry of success attribution, but few will dispute that this book spells out succinctly and beautifully what is changing. There is no special secret as Arkebe rightly demonstrates: industrial policy is about a reform-minded government having a drive to make it happen; but also having the right cocktail of policies that generate the incentives in every front to make success possible. From agro-processing to light industrial production, from textiles to infrastructure servicing, Ethiopia has become a good case study for other countries to emulate. Be it through regulatory and macro incentives, be it through energy-centered investment, it demonstrates the need for coherence and eagerness to learn from other realities, particularly from Asia. A must read for the many Africans engaged in structural transformation.
This is a profoundly original book about the Ethiopian development experience which highlights the potential for, and constraints on, industrialization in Africa. It questions conventional wisdom to argue that industrial policy can work even in low-income countries, where the State performs a developmental role and has the space to make its own policy choices. The author recognizes that industrial policy is easier said than done, to focus on implementation as much as analysis, and emphasizes that even if outcomes are mixed there is learning from both successes and failures. This lucid and engaging book is an unusual blend of theory and policy, as Arkebe Oqubay combines careful scholarship with his rich experience as a policy practitioner. It is essential reading for scholars and practitioners in countries that are latecomers to industrialization.
Active and responsive industrial policy, trial-and-error attitude, and great attention to sectoral details proposed in this book are essentially East Asian. As a scholar and policy maker, Dr Arkebe has revealed to us what is going on in the mind-set of Ethiopian leaders, and why the country is growing fast and absorbing a large amount of light manufacturing investment from abroad.
This book arrives at a propitious moment. There is a growing recognition of the importance of industrialization in Africa and an expanding consensus on the need for industrial policy but a paucity of studies to map out the terrain of transformation. The volume provides detailed insights into the institutional configuration and political dynamics underlying industrial policy success and failures by an insider closely tied to the center of power in Ethiopia. The book is essential reading for policy makers, academics and students of the political economy of Ethiopian economic policy.
Arkebe Oqubay is the ultimate insider, yet he offers an admirably detached and balanced assessment of the ups and downs of Ethiopias industrial policies. His view of industrial policy is a sophisticated one. Successful intervention requires the right political and institutional framework. It demands a deep understanding of market opportunities, of supply-side problems and linkages across activities, and an appreciation of what government can and cannot do. And it depends, most crucially, on the governments capacity to implement the appropriate measures. This book will be essential reading for all those concerned with the process of industrialisation in developing countries.
Made in Africa is a case study of Ethiopia, but far more than a case study. It uses Ethiopia as the center of a thoughtful and wide-ranging discussion of the literature on the developmental state, trade policy, and industrialization-at-large, and celebrates the contributions of the more heterodox economists such as Hirschman, Rodrik, Amsden, Reinert, and those at the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD). It is a model of its kind for economists and political scientists working on development issues around the world. What is more, it is beautifully written!
Notă biografică
Arkebe Oqubay is a Senior Minister and Special Adviser to the Prime Minister of Ethiopia and has been at the centre of policymaking for over twenty-five years. He is a research associate at the Centre of African Studies in the University of London, and holds a PhD in development studies from SOAS, University of London. He is the former mayor of Addis Ababa and winner of the ABN Best African Mayor of 2006, and finalist for the World Mayor Award 2006. He is a recipient of the Order of the Rising Sun, Gold and Silver Star and serves as board chair of several leading public organizations and international advisory boards. His work includes Made in Africa: Industrial Policy in Ethiopia (OUP, 2015); African Economic Development: Evidence, Theory, and Policy (OUP, 2019); and China-Africa and an Economic Transformation (2019, OUP). He was recognized as one of the 100 Most Influential Africans of 2016, and a 'leading thinker on Africa's strategic development' by the New African.