Ethiopia is targeting double-digit growth of 10.1% in the 2026/27 fiscal year, anchored by a record 2.33 trillion birr (about US$14.8bn) federal budget. The policy stance prioritises exports, investment and productivity gains across key sectors. This marks a sharp step-up in fiscal ambition. It signals that Addis Ababa wants to keep the country among Africa’s fastest-growing economies, despite tighter global financial conditions and geopolitical shocks.
Finance Minister Ahmed Shide has presented to the House of Peoples’ Representatives a proposed budget of more than 2.33 trillion birr for 2026/27. This is up from around 1.93 trillion birr in the current fiscal year. The new fiscal year starts on 8 July 2026, aligning spending with the government’s medium-term reform and growth plans.
The administration projects real GDP growth of 10.1% in 2026/27, after a forecast 10.2% expansion in 2025/26. Shide has indicated that Ethiopia recorded average annual growth of about 6.8% between 2020 and 2024, with output rising by 9.2% in the previous fiscal year. If current and projected numbers hold, Ethiopia will remain in the top tier of African performers and rank among the fastest-expanding economies globally.
The growth strategy leans on three main drivers: stronger export performance, increased foreign direct investment and higher agricultural productivity. The Ministry of Finance expects industry to grow by 12.6% in 2026/27, outpacing the wider economy. Agriculture, still central to jobs and food security, is forecast to expand by 7.6%, while services are projected to rise by 9.9%. This mix suggests an ongoing structural shift towards manufacturing and services, but with policy still anchored in raising farm output and resilience.
The budget framework also factors in the impact of tensions in the Middle East on fuel prices and trade routes. This reflects Ethiopia’s exposure as a large fuel importer and a key player in regional logistics networks. Policymakers appear intent on using fiscal policy both to cushion these external shocks and to keep momentum behind infrastructure and industrial projects.
For investors, the government’s projections for Ethiopia economic growth underscore both scale and complexity. On one hand, double-digit growth targets in an economy of Ethiopia’s size, backed by rising public expenditure, point to expanding markets in consumer goods, agribusiness, logistics, manufacturing and services. On the other, delivery will depend on policy execution in areas that have long shaped the country’s risk profile.
Officials and analysts alike highlight several conditions for success: effective inflation management, improved foreign exchange availability, continued infrastructure build-out, and sustained progress on structural reforms. Ethiopia remains sensitive to global commodity price swings and supply-chain disruptions, given its fuel import bill and reliance on regional trade corridors. Any renewed external shock could test both the budget assumptions and macroeconomic stability.
At the same time, Ethiopia is pushing to strengthen manufacturing capacity, improve logistics connectivity and expand export earnings, aligning its ambitions with wider African themes of domestic production and regional integration. As implementation of the African Continental Free Trade Area deepens, strong Ethiopia economic growth would have spillover effects on regional supply chains, cross-border investment and trade volumes.
For institutional investors and development finance institutions, the signal is clear: Ethiopia is positioning itself for another phase of high growth driven by investment and reforms, but the path will be contingent on credible macro management and steady progress on sector-level projects. The parliamentary debate on the record 2026/27 budget, and how spending is eventually allocated across infrastructure, agriculture and industry, will be a key indicator to watch over the coming months.
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