By Tom Lavers
Recent foreign agricultural investment in Africa has generated a great deal of interest and criticism, with western media warning of a neo-colonial ?land grab‘. This paper moves beyond this narrow assessment by examining the political and social dynamics of foreign agricultural investment in Ethiopia, a country which has figured prominently in recent debates. The paper links macro level analysis regarding the types of projects and their role in the Ethiopian economy to case studies of investments at the micro level which examine changing patterns of land use and implications for displacement, employment and technology transfer. The paper concludes that the expansion of foreign investment in Ethiopia is part of a government move towards an export-led development strategy. As such, macro benefits in terms of increased foreign exchange earnings come at the cost of increased risks at the micro level to people living in the vicinity of new investments, in particular, politically marginal pastoral populations in remote regions.
File: Tom Lavers.pdf