Ethiopia grants first financial services licence to foreign firm

Ethiopian Premier Abiy Ahmed addresses the press in Addis Ababa in 2015. [File, Standard]

Ethiopia’s central bank granted a financial services licence to a foreign-owned company for the first time last week, as the government begins to open up the economy of Africa’s second most populous nation.

Ethio Lease’s new licence signals Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is moving ahead with the economic reforms he pledged when he took office last year.

The company will lease equipment such as MRI scanners, tractors and drilling rigs to companies that can’t import such equipment themselves due to foreign exchange shortages.

This will create jobs and increase productivity, Ethio Lease said in a statement. The company is owned by New York-based equipment leasing firm Africa Asset Finance Company (AAFC). “There is a liquidity shortage and a lot of businesses are craving equipment that they just can’t get,” said Frans Van Schaik, chairman and chief executive of AAFC.

“Almost every factory in Ethiopia will be able to tell you about how an equipment shortage or some other issue is delaying their construction or operations.” The company plans to import Sh60 billion ($600 million) of equipment initially.

Unmet demand

Abiy wants the private sector to help provide jobs for millions of unemployed youth in the nation’s 100 million people. Ethio Lease will fill a significant unmet demand for equipment, National Bank of Ethiopia governor Yinager Dessie told Reuters in a phone interview.

Yinager said that the central bank would like to license more foreign companies to lease equipment. “This will ultimately create more jobs, more employment and more economic growth,” he said.

Yinager said the government was taking tangible measures to support the private sector, noting that last year the central bank allocated more foreign exchange to the private sector than the public sector for the first time.

“We will continue this,” he said. The governor declined to specify current foreign reserves but said it was stronger than when Abiy took office 18 months ago.

Ethiopia wants to open up its economy, said Van Schaik, but problems remain.  “The bureaucracy in Ethiopia is overwhelming,” he said. “If you want to succeed in Ethiopia, you need to be patient and persistent.”

The foreign exchange shortages have worsened in the past five years as the government spent heavily on infrastructure before export earnings from new sectors such as manufacturing took off.