Africa: From Fiscal Burden to Job Engine – Ethiopia’s State-Owned Enterprise Transformation

Africa: From Fiscal Burden to Job Engine – Ethiopia’s State-Owned Enterprise Transformation


STORY HIGHLIGHTS

  • Beginning in 2019, the World Bank supported a comprehensive reform program that established Ethiopia’s first state-owned enterprises (SOEs) database, while strengthening oversight and updating the legal and governance framework.
  • The SOEs have shifted from absorbing public funds to generating them, contributing a combined ETB 117 billion (approximately $720 million) to the national budget through taxes and dividends in just nine months.
  • As SOEs become stronger and more transparent, they are increasingly positioned to support Ethiopia’s jobs agenda by stimulating markets and creating new opportunities for workers.

In just nine months of the 2024 to 2025 fiscal year, Ethiopia’s state-owned enterprises (SOEs) paid ETB 98 billion ($600 million) in taxes and ETB 19 billion ($120 million) in dividends to the government. This meant more resources were available to fund salaries, provision of electricity, and public services, while easing pressure on the national budget.


Follow us on WhatsApp | LinkedIn for the latest headlines

For years, these same enterprises did not generate enough income to sustain themselves. Instead of contributing to public finances, they depended on them. A 2021 World Bank review found that revenues and net worth rose for 41 federal SOEs from 2013 to 2019, but profitability fell. Many operated without audited accounts and some had not produced financial statements for more than five years. This created a system where decisions were made without reliable financial information. The government did not have a complete view of the assets it owned or how they were performing. Losses were absorbed into the broader budget, and risks were difficult to measure in advance.

Turning this around required a reset in how public assets were managed. The government needed to know what it owned. It needed to control how these companies were run. It also needed to manage its fiscal risk and hold the SOEs accountable for results.

Now, most federally owned enterprises are producing financial statements on time. Many have completed external audits and begun disclosing their results. Regular portfolio reviews were introduced to track performance, set targets, and guide investment decisions.

Importantly, these reforms are shaping Ethiopia’s jobs outlook. Better managed and more financially stable enterprises are now able to expand their services and invest in new areas, while also creating space for skills development and new employment across key sectors of the economy.

Ethiopia’s progress in modernizing its SOE sector demonstrates what is possible when strong government leadership is paired with targeted support. By strengthening governance and aligning public assets with development goals, the country is opening new pathways for job creation and private sector led growth. Maryam Salim World Bank Division Director for Eritrea, Ethiopia, South Sudan, and Sudan

Progress to this point reflects a sustained and deliberate reform effort. Starting in 2019, the World Bank initiated a program to support Ethiopia’s SOE and public asset management reform, financed by the Ethiopia Reform Support Multi-Donor Trust Fund. Through the support, the Ministry of Finance built the country’s first comprehensive database of state-owned enterprises. For the first time, policymakers could see how much each company earned, spent, and owed, and assess the risks linked to state ownership. An SOE Oversight Directorate was established to monitor performance and track exposure. Instead of relying on fragmented reports, the government could now work with a consolidated view of the sector.

With better information in place, the next phase focused on how these enterprises were governed. A new privatization law introduced in 2020 set clearer rules for transparency and process. It defined how transactions should be managed and reduced discretion in decision-making.

A year later, Ethiopian Investment Holdings (EIH), the country’s first sovereign holding company, was established to manage the state’s commercial assets as a single portfolio. It marked a major institutional advance that allows the government to manage public assets more strategically and transparently. The shift was reinforced by a new state-owned enterprise law requiring professional and independent boards and management teams. It strengthened the oversight role of the Ministry of Finance and established rules to ensure that state-owned enterprises compete on fair terms with private firms. The law also required companies to adopt international financial reporting standards and to publish audited financial statements each year. Public service obligations were defined more clearly, along with a framework for how these responsibilities should be measured and financed.

Changes were implemented within the enterprises themselves. Ethio Post, which is the national postal service, for example, moved from years of losses and audit backlogs to one of the strongest performers in the sector, while the Ethiopian Trading Business Corporation restructured its operations to focus on removing barriers that had limited private sector participation in agribusiness. Across the sector, management teams began operating against defined annual targets. Performance reviews were introduced to assess progress and adjust strategies where needed. This created a link between operational decisions and measurable outcomes.