Risk
taking behavior: Another look at the Ethiopian economy
Tigabu Molla Meresa†
Economic analyses of growth have bewared that
sustainable economic growth has been incumbent upon the level of technological
development; which has also been the source of divergence in economic strengths
and growth rates between countries across the world. The technological breakthrough that steered
Industrial Revolution and its lasting effect on the global economy is one such
triumphs of technology. For it is the main source of productivity increase, a
failure to maintain a continuous technological progress would precipitate
long-run growth to grind to a halt. So
how to drive and sustain technological progress has been the nub of questions
around economic growth.
The steering wheel of this engine of growth is
primarily Research and development (R&D) effort. Yet R&D is a risky
activity, involving not only how much to invest but also how to invest. The
amount of resources it requires and the uncertainty of its pay-offs makes it a
risky strategy. Firms and other agents like governments that have, whatever
happens, continually committed unflagging endeavor to R&D have been marks of
economic success. In other words, risk-taking behavior has been the thrust of
sustained growth through out the world. Economic records also show that the
level and rate of economic growth has been dependent on the level of
risk-taking behavior; that is, large firms have been the main sources of
R&D and hence, technological progress. This is because large firms have
more resources to invest than small firms, of economies of scale and scope in
undertaking R&D and of the chance to spread the risks from R&D. What does
this mean to
Needless to say, in all economic measures
This reality poses an important question: who
can unlock this gate and up our growth track?
The only possible home-grown candidate we are left with is our
government. Its sheer size and the corresponding advantages, and its ability to
muster more resources makes the government the viable option. It can embark on
risky projects – projects mainly in areas of
agriculture using irrigation and other physical
sciences - that require high-fixed costs that may not be profitable in the
short run and attractive to the private sector. There is also a stronger case
for a strong government involvement in the economy: the country’s political
foundation. The country has only recently emerged to rectify the longstanding
internal problems via ethnic federalism – the system that not just helps bring
about equivalent economic, political, social and cultural footing in an ethnic
diverse country but also effectively equilibriumize its political internal and
external forces ( this is a topic beyond this article). Now assume that there is a strong private
sector and a minimal government involvement. Since private firms aim at
maximizing their profit, they concentrate in areas where profits are reaped,
leaving aside unsuitable-seeming areas. In other words, there are investment
activities that are made only out of political considerations to promote the
doctrine of equivalent footing and hence general investment attractions. Yet
these considerations are out of the profit equations of private firms.
Therefore, to let this happen impairs not only our growth track but also our
existence – chickens will come home to roost. This is also why we need a strong
government participation in the present
The role of government is the main wedge issue
in the world – how much intervention is optimal or if we need it in the first
place will remain the major dividing issue, especially considering the recent
success of state capitalism in countries like
Does that mean that we don’t need a strong and
vibrant private sector? Absolutely not. Given the reasons I mentioned earlier,
at the current state the private sector is not in a position to open the gate.
So the government should help unlock the gate, while at the same time helping
build up the capacity of the private sector so that in the long run the latter
can take over the driver’s seat. Yes in the long run when we will have ensured
equivalent footing, when individual interest will have replaced group interest
by a strong economy and competitive environment. Policy measures that foster
R&D in the private sector may include direct subsidization of R&D by
firms, patent protection, interfirm agreements regarding R&D and cultural
reversal, (while maintaining some of our good cultural values), through the
development and flow of information.
† The writer, Tigabu Molla, is a student of
Health Economics, Policy and Management. University of Oslo, Norway.