Period poverty crisis forces women to pay for dignity

By the end of this year, no fewer than 47 million Ethiopian women will be of menstrual age. The market for hygiene pads is projected to grow by 10 percent annually, reaching up to 20 million dollars.

Menstrual hygiene is no longer a peripheral consumer issue but an element of national health, school attendance, and workforce participation. Experts warn that the failure to address supply chain bottlenecks and high costs impacts the daily lives of nearly half the population.

Luladay Abraham treats the arrival of her menstrual cycle less as a private inconvenience than as a monthly test of endurance. This situation highlights the pressures faced by women across Ethiopia.

Makala yanayohusiana

New data shows that around 70 percent of Ethiopian households did not purchase toothpaste in the past year.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Retail prices for bottled water in Addis Ababa have risen sharply over the past three months, with the smallest sizes seeing the biggest jumps.

Finance Minister Ahmed Shide reported to parliament that the 1.93 trillion birr federal budget is under pressure from delayed external aid. He addressed lawmakers on May 4, 2026, noting that domestic borrowing has risen faster than planned. The session took place without private media present.

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