World Bank praises Ethiopia's state enterprises as job creators

The World Bank states that Ethiopia's government development enterprises have shifted from budget burdens to job opportunities. A new report details reforms turning these entities into efficient revenue generators.

Addis Ababa, April 7, 2026 – The World Bank's report titled "From Budget Burden to Job Opportunity: Government Development Enterprises Reform" notes that Ethiopia's state enterprises previously generated high revenues and assets but veered toward losses. Problems included inadequate audits, substandard financial systems, and opaque governance, making them fiscal drains.

Reforms have repositioned these enterprises as efficient job engines. In the 2017 budget year alone, they contributed $120 million (19 billion birr) in profit shares to government revenue. This eases budgetary pressures for debt servicing, electricity supply, and public services.

World Bank Country Director Mariam Salim stated that Ethiopia is strengthening state-owned enterprise governance, aligning public assets with development goals, fostering job creation, and paving ways for private sector growth. She attributed this progress to robust government leadership and support.

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