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Major features of Ethiopia’s new investment law: an appraisal of their policy implications

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  • Bereket Alemayehu Hagos

Abstract

This paper analyses the major features of the 2020 Ethiopian investment law and their policy implications. The law has liberalized many areas of the Ethiopian economy to pave the way for increasing the private sector’s share and diminishing the Government’s role. It adopted the negative list approach to liberalization to simplify the process of determining investment fields that are open for foreign investors. It laid out procedures for handling investors’ grievances and for resolving investor–State disputes, principally through domestic institutions. It also obliges investors to discharge their corporate social responsibilities. The paper argues that these features of the law demand transparent, efficient and competent government institutions to properly regulate and protect investments and to attain sustainable development as the ultimate goal of the law. For this purpose, it also argues that two factors are essential: ensuring effective institutional coordination and supplementing the mandatory corporate social responsibility requirements with voluntary engagement. In addition, it contends that the Government needs to strengthen linkages between foreign and domestic investment, promote decent jobs and sustainability, enhance human resources and infrastructure, and build a stable political system to reap the significant development benefits of investment, as envisaged in the investment law. The paper also suggests that other countries, in Africa and beyond, can benefit from applying these lessons in designing or reforming their investment policies to maximize the sustainable development gains from foreign investment

Suggested Citation

  • Bereket Alemayehu Hagos, . "Major features of Ethiopia’s new investment law: an appraisal of their policy implications," UNCTAD Transnational Corporations Journal, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development.
  • Handle: RePEc:unc:tncjou:86
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    File URL: https://unctad.org/system/files/official-document/diaeia2022d2a5_en.pdf?repec
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Bonnitcha, Jonathan & Skovgaard Poulsen, Lauge N. & Waibel, Michael, 2017. "The Political Economy of the Investment Treaty Regime," OUP Catalogue, Oxford University Press, number 9780198719557.
    2. Schill,Stephan W., 2009. "The Multilateralization of International Investment Law," Cambridge Books, Cambridge University Press, number 9780521762366, November.
    3. United Nations UN, 2015. "Transforming our World: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development," Working Papers id:7559, eSocialSciences.
    4. Jonathan Bonnitcha, 2019. "Investment Wars: Contestation and Confusion in Debate About Investment Liberalization," Journal of International Economic Law, Oxford University Press, vol. 22(4), pages 629-654.
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    Cited by:

    1. Gruber, Aaron, 2023. "Navigating a world of constraints: Developmentalism, industrial policy, and the limits to structural transformation in Ethiopia," ÖFSE-Forum, Austrian Foundation for Development Research (ÖFSE), volume 87, number 287748.

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