July 31, 2025
Addis Insight
Ethiopia’s Central Bank Celebrates One Year of Sweeping Reforms as Economy Enters New Era
By Addis Insight Staff | July 29, 2025 – Addis Ababa
Ethiopia’s central bank marked the one-year anniversary of its historic macroeconomic reform program on Monday, touting significant progress on inflation control, foreign exchange inflows, and banking sector modernization—milestones the government hopes will anchor long-term stability in Africa’s second-most populous nation.
The reform package, introduced by the National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE) on July 29, 2024, represents one of the most ambitious overhauls of Ethiopia’s financial and monetary system in decades. With support from the government’s Home-Grown Economic Reform Agenda, the initiative was designed to stabilize the macroeconomic environment, ease chronic foreign currency shortages, and prepare the banking sector for greater competition—including the entry of foreign players.
“This first year has laid the foundation for a more resilient and inclusive economy,” the NBE said in its official statement. “While we acknowledge challenges ahead, the momentum is clearly in motion.”
Monetary Policy Anchored on Inflation Control and Market Tools
Central to the reform effort has been the modernization of monetary policy. In a departure from past practices, the NBE set inflation control as its primary institutional mandate, introducing a suite of tools to manage liquidity and guide expectations.
Key measures include:
The introduction of a central bank policy rate (NBR) to provide a transparent benchmark for interest rates across the financial system.
Launch of open market operations (OMO) as a new mechanism for adjusting liquidity in the banking sector.
Establishment of a Monetary Policy Committee (MPC), which now issues quarterly macroeconomic outlooks and recommendations.
Creation of a standing deposit/lending facility and emergency liquidity assistance window.
Elimination of the long-standing requirement for banks to purchase Treasury bonds.
These shifts enabled the central bank to withdraw from direct credit to government, ending a 12-year cycle of monetized fiscal deficits. The monetary tightening appears to be yielding results: year-on-year inflation declined to 13.9% in June 2025, down from 20% a year earlier, according to official data.
“The central bank has transitioned from administrative controls to indirect market-based tools, aligning more closely with global best practices,” said a macroeconomist at a major development bank in Addis Ababa.
Foreign Exchange Market Sees Structural Transformation
Ethiopia’s chronic foreign currency shortage—long a drag on business operations and investor confidence—was another core focus of the reforms.
The country’s exchange rate regime was fundamentally liberalized:
The birr’s value is now determined by market forces, replacing a decades-old managed float.
Banks were freed from most surrender requirements and current account restrictions.
A formal interbank FX market and regulated FX bureaus were established.
Exporters gained flexibility to retain a larger share of their foreign exchange earnings for longer periods.
Foreign portfolio investors were allowed to enter Ethiopia’s nascent domestic capital markets.
As a result, the NBE reported a 33% increase in total FX inflows, reaching an estimated $32 billion. That figure includes:
$8.3B in goods exports
$8.5B in service exports
$7.1B in diaspora remittances
$3.9B in foreign direct investment (FDI)
$2.7B in new non-IMF loans
$1.9B in official grants
This influx financed approximately $19 billion in goods imports, $6.7 billion in services, and $1.4 billion in debt service payments—while also helping the central bank triple its FX reserves and double commercial banks’ FX assets.
“The FX market has matured faster than expected,” said a private sector bank executive. “Average daily forex sales to businesses have more than doubled, easing severe backlogs in trade finance.”
Banks are now selling an average of $25 million in forex daily, up from $11 million before the reforms. For monthly FX access, firms are averaging $500 million, compared to $258 million a year ago.
The private sector also secured over $445 million in foreign supplier credit, significantly above the previous year’s $204 million, thanks to greater FX certainty.
Financial Sector Sees Growth, Digital Shift, and Foreign Entry
Ethiopia’s banking sector—long characterized by high concentration and limited competition—has seen major structural reforms aimed at promoting financial inclusion, digitization, and competitiveness.
Key developments include:
A new Banking Sector Proclamation and revised NBE regulatory framework, enhancing central bank autonomy, governance, and supervisory capacity.
Directives improving credit appraisal, governance, and single borrower exposure limits.
Recapitalization of the largest systemic bank to strengthen sector resilience.
Official green light for the entry of foreign banks—a long-awaited move that is expected to reshape the competitive landscape.
Significant investment in digital finance infrastructure, including SME lending, mobile banking, and digital identity verification systems.
By mid-2025:
Deposits in the banking system increased by 41%, totaling Birr 3.5 trillion.
Domestic credit expanded by 22% to Birr 3.7 trillion.
Key indicators remained stable: NPL ratio at 3.9%, capital adequacy at 17.3%, and liquidity at 24.9%.
Millions of new digital wallets, credit accounts, and merchant payment platforms were registered.
“Digital finance is becoming a mainstream driver of inclusion,” said an NBE official. “We are seeing transformative impacts, especially in underserved areas.”
Risks Ahead: Policy Credibility and Institutional Strength
While the early outcomes have been largely positive, economists caution that Ethiopia’s reform program still faces significant risks:
Sustained disinflation may be challenged by supply shocks, currency volatility, and fiscal pressures.
Market-based FX regimes require deep liquidity and strong supervision to avoid instability.
The entry of foreign banks will test the regulatory capacity of the NBE.
Ethiopia’s debt sustainability remains fragile despite improvements in current account dynamics.
“The reforms are bold and promising, but the real challenge is durability,” said a senior analyst at a regional investment firm. “This hinges on institutional depth, political buy-in, and continued IMF alignment.”
Investor Outlook: cautiously optimistic
For investors, Ethiopia’s new macro landscape presents a mixed but improving picture:
The FX market is more transparent, with growing liquidity.
Monetary policy is increasingly rule-based and market-sensitive.
The financial sector is opening, digitizing, and showing signs of deepening.
Real interest rates are positive, and inflation expectations are moderating.
Still, concerns around legal enforcement, capital repatriation, and policy consistency persist.
The Bottom Line: Ethiopia’s first year of macro reforms has delivered tangible progress—but staying the course will require steady leadership, institutional resilience, and continued reform momentum. For now, the country is signaling its serious intent to align with global norms, attract capital, and build a modern economic system.
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