Masterarbeit, 2016
55 Seiten
CHAPTER ONE
Introduction
1.1. Background of the study
1.2. Statement of the problem
1.3. Object of the study
1.3.1. Major objectives
1.3.2. Sub-objectives
1.4. Hypothesis of the research
1.5. Scope of the study
1.6. Definition of terms
CHAPTER TWO
2. Reviews of literature
2.1. The Concept of Export Diversification
2.2. Theoretical Review
2.1.1. Ricardian Model
2.1.2. Heckscher Ohline Model
2.3. Empirical literature
2.3.1. Export product and export revenues earning in Developing countries
2.4. East Asian countries experience on export product diversification
2.4.1. Developed Suitable policies
2.4.2. Strong Saving Culture
CHAPTER THREE
3. Methodology and data sources
3.1. Research design
3.2. Source of data
3.3. Model Specification
3.3.1. Export diversification Model
3.3.2. Determinants of Export diversification Model
1. Gross Domestic Saving
2. Exchange rate
3. Foreign direct investment
4. Inflation
5. Per Capital GDP
6. Trade openness
CHAPTER FOUR
4. Analysis and interpretation of data
4.1. The patterns of Export diversification in some of East Asian countries.
4.2. Descriptive Statistics for dependent and independent variables
4.3. The regression Analysis in four East African countries
4.4. The Trends of Export Product Diversification in Ethiopia
4.4.1. Trends of Saving and foreign Direct Investment
4.4.2 The trends of export product diversification and foreign direct investment
4.4.3. The trends of coffee and other six major export products share
4.4.4. The trends of primary and manufacturer export product share
CHAPTER FIVE
5. Conclusion and policy recommendation
5.1. Conclusion
5.2. Policy recommendation
This thesis investigates the patterns of export product diversification and identifies the primary determinants influencing this diversification in four East African nations, with a specific focus on Ethiopia. The research aims to establish why these countries remain heavily reliant on a narrow range of primary commodities and seeks to derive policy lessons from the successful export-led growth experiences of East Asian countries.
1.1.Background of the study
The countries in which their economy depends on few commodities deemed to have lower growth prospects because of unfavorable characteristics on their export in the world markets and negative feature of natural resource extraction and production. On this regards, at the end of 1970s the fall in prices left many commodity dependency countries, especially Africa with a large amount of debts and decline in flow of foreign resource to finance them in 1980s (OECD, 2003).
In addition, different research paper has shown as export earning of most developing countries in general and African countries in particular heavily depends on very few primary commodities. On this regard (SAMEN, 2010) explained as the exports of primary commodities are extremely vulnerable to external shocks. This factor makes developing countries policy makers facing challenges on expanding export revenues and to have stable and sustainable export revenue earning.
Over the last decades Sub-Saharan African export has dominated by few primary products like coffee, gold, oilseed, vegetables and, hide and skin. Those products constitutes above 80% of total export of the countries (World Bank, 2006). It indicates that the major part constitutes agricultural products and production of those agricultural products are depends on rain feed agriculture which are vulnerable on various environmental related risks.
Sub-Saharan African countries economies surrounded by different internal and external problems which led to stay with low level of capital accumulation. Dependency on few primary commodities, low investment level both domestic and through FDI and low level of infrastructure development considered as the major factors of SSA poverty trap (UNU, 2006).
CHAPTER ONE: This chapter introduces the research context, the problem statement regarding commodity dependency, and defines the primary objectives and scope of the study.
CHAPTER TWO: This section reviews existing theoretical models of international trade and empirical literature regarding export diversification, including lessons learned from the East Asian experience.
CHAPTER THREE: This chapter details the research methodology, specifically the econometric models used and the sources of the secondary data collected for the analysis.
CHAPTER FOUR: This section presents the analysis and interpretation of the collected data, examining the trends in export diversification and the results of the regression analysis for East African countries.
CHAPTER FIVE: This chapter provides the final conclusions based on the research findings and offers policy recommendations aimed at enhancing export diversification and sustainable economic development.
Export Diversification, East Africa, Ethiopia, Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, Economic Growth, Primary Commodities, Foreign Direct Investment, Gross Domestic Saving, Trade Liberalization, Manufacturing, Agricultural Products, Macroeconomic Stability, Comparative Advantage, Export Revenues, Structural Transformation.
The paper primarily focuses on assessing the patterns and determinants of export product diversification in four East African countries, with a deep dive into the specific case of Ethiopia.
The central themes include the reliance on primary commodities, the impact of macroeconomic variables (like savings, inflation, and exchange rates) on export performance, and the lessons that can be drawn from East Asian industrialization strategies.
The goal is to understand why East African countries have failed to significantly diversify their export baskets and to identify the specific factors that, if addressed, could lead to more sustainable, diversified export-led growth.
The research uses both descriptive statistics and quantitative econometric techniques. Specifically, it employs the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) for measuring concentration and a Generalized Least Squares (GLS) random effect model for the regression analysis.
The main section covers the literature review of trade theories, the methodological framework, empirical data analysis of the four East African nations, and a specific trend analysis of Ethiopia’s export reliance on coffee and other primary goods.
Key terms include Export Diversification, East Africa, Ethiopia, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), Economic Growth, and Primary Commodity Dependency.
The paper uses the East Asian "tiger" economies as a successful model, highlighting how they utilized export-oriented policies, domestic saving cultures, and a shift from labor-intensive to high-value manufacturing to achieve rapid development.
The study identifies that low domestic saving rates in Ethiopia limit the capital available for the private sector, which in turn acts as a major barrier to financing the transition from primary commodity exports to a more diversified industrial base.
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