Department of Business Management
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://repository.mu.edu.et/handle/123456789/117
Browse
Item Analysis of Ethiopian government Project funding from China: Challenges and Opportunities(Mekelle University, 2025-12-28) ZHANG ZHONGGANGThis thesis explores the impacts, challenges, and opportunities of Chinese-funded Ethiopian government projects from 2018 to 2025. These projects have been instrumental in advancing Ethiopia’s infrastructure development, particularly in transport corridors such as the Addis Ababa–Djibouti railway, energy transmission networks, and industrial parks. Serving as a cornerstone for Ethiopia’s industrialization and enhanced regional connectivity, these endeavors have generated significant socio-economic benefits including job creation, technology and skills transfer, and industrial capacity improvements. Nonetheless, the implementation of these projects faces persistent challenges. Financial obstacles such as delayed fund disbursement, foreign exchange shortages, and currency volatility regularly disrupt project timelines and increase costs. Complicated regulatory environments marked by bureaucratic inefficiencies, inconsistent VAT refund systems, and weak contract enforcement exacerbate operational hurdles. Managerial challenges stem from the need to harmonize centralized Chinese corporate control with local adaptations like guanxi networks, crucial for navigating Ethiopia’s institutional landscape. Additionally, limited institutional capacity within Ethiopian bodies impedes consistent project oversight. Risk factors, including political instability and economic fluctuations, pose considerable threats to project sustainability and investor confidence. Despite these impediments, adaptive management practices, ongoing institutional reforms, and Ethiopia’s strategic alignment with China’s Belt and Road Initiative underscore the substantial potential for these projects to drive economic growth. The study recommends integrated policy reforms to streamline financial and regulatory processes, enhance managerial competencies, strengthen institutional capacity, and advance comprehensive risk management, ensuring that Chinese-funded projects become more efficient, transparent, and sustainable. These insights provide a valuable roadmap for Ethiopian policymakers, Chinese investors, and project managers committed to fostering lasting and mutually beneficial development cooperation.
