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What We (Don’t) Know About Eritrea’s Economy

Think Africa Press - ARTICLE |  11 APRIL 2014 - 2:26PM | BY JOSTEIN HAUGE Eritrea perfectly illustrates the amount of guesswork involved in economic analysis of Africa. At the start of this week, Nigeria's GDP figures nearly doubled after the government

Think Africa Press – ARTICLE | 

11 APRIL 2014 – 2:26PM | BY JOSTEIN HAUGE

Eritrea perfectly illustrates the amount of guesswork involved in economic analysis of Africa.

At the start of this week, Nigeria’s GDP figures nearly doubled after the government recalculated economic output. Statisticians rebased their numbers to include changes to the economy, and in a heartbeat Africa’s most populous country had also become its richest, leapfrogging South Africa by a mile, and shooting up the global rankings to join the likes of Norway and Poland.

Although the ground under their feet was exactly the same, the country they were living in on paper had suddenly shifted for Nigeria’s 170 million population. Or should that be 180 million? Or 140 million? Or even higher or lower? The actual size of Nigeria’s population is also based on questionable estimates and evidence, and it too is heavily contested.

The fact that Nigeria’s statistics are so deeply shrouded in doubt is striking especially given that it is, as we now know, the richest country on the continent. This begs the question: if our understanding of Nigeria rests on such shaky ground, what about poorer, less well-connected, and more closed off countries? For example, what about Eritrea?

No data

Trying to get any data about Eritrea can be a thankless task. Access to information is very limited and the authoritarian regime’s relationship with any media apart from those run by its own information ministry is strained at best. The Horn of Africa nation is deeply isolated internationally and is considered to have one of the worst records in the world when it comes to civil liberties, political rights and domestic freedoms.

Unsurprisingly, international headlines about the Red Sea state are rare, and when there is coverage, it is usually about runaways fleeing the nation’s grip, abductions of Eritrean refugees in the Sinai Peninsula, human rights violations, or tentative predictions about how long the regime can last.

With virtually no data to work with, it unsurprising that analysts also tend to shy away from the country. In continent-wide studies, Eritrea is often coloured in grey to demarcate ‘no data’, while even multilateral organisations such as the African Development Bank sometimes have to release reports that pretend Eritrea does not exist.

The 2012 African Economic Outlook Report, which is probably the most comprehensive analysis of the country for several years, provides a few valuable if limited insights. But even this most complete report on record misses out some hugely important features such as population size.

Given the difficulties in estimating Eritrea’s population − existing figures range from about 3.5 million to almost double that at 6 million or more − it is perhaps wiser not to guess at all. However, the size of the population has enormous consequences for all per capita figures. The World Bank, for example, estimates Eritrea’s income per head to be $504, basing its calculations on population figures of just over 6 million. If Eritrea’s population were in fact closer to the 3.5 million mark, that income per head figure could be as much as $864.

The black market

However, especially when it comes to Eritrea, even reliable figures can only tell us so much. For instance, the country’s black market for currency exchange significantly complicates things.

The Eritrean currency has been pegged at 15 Nakfa to $1 since 2005. Due to high inflation over many years, the currency has lost value, but the government keeps it fixed in an attempt to tackle external debt. This has contributed to the blossoming of a parallel and illegal internal market for currency exchange. Those caught exchanging currency on the black market can be imprisoned for up to 18 months, but the entire economy depends on such illegal exchanges.

In late 2012, the rates in this illicit market offered three times the amount of Nakfa per dollar compared to official rates. And in March 2013, this already massive gap widened as the Eritrean government overvalued the national currency even more, fixing 10 Nakfa to $1. One important implication of this when examining Eritrea’s national economy is that using the official exchange rate is likely to hugely overestimate the real level of economic development. Using the rates found on the burgeoning black market would suggest the country is significantly poorer than if using the government’s rates.

Going a step further into the real detail of Eritrea’s economy, unofficial sources report that most households in the capital Asmara receive an average of $350 per month in undeclared remittances from relatives abroad. There are two particularly well-known mechanisms through which these clandestine transfers takes place: alongside shipments of contraband goods from Sudan, and when relatives from abroad visit.

These transfers are likely to be hugely significant for Eritrea’s economy. After all, a wage in the formal sector will at best leave you with 1500-2500 Nakfa per month. According to official rates, that comes to $150-250, but in reality it is worth considerably less and is barely enough to survive. For most families in Asmara, therefore, remittances are crucial and often constitute the majority − sometimes as much as 90% − of their overall income. Counterintuitively perhaps, Eritrea’s alarming brain drain ends up significantly stimulating its economy.

However, not all families in Eritrea are so lucky. A pattern of regional migration has occurred within the country in which those that have no relatives abroad are destined to a rural life as subsistence farmers cultivating mostly barren land, while those with close ties to family outside the country can maintain a life in the capital.

A shot in the dark

After Nigeria’s GDP was rebased earlier this week, nothing concrete changed. Nigerians didn’t suddenly have more cash in their wallets, the unemployed were still unemployed, and the many malaises in the national economy went nowhere. However, in the medium term, the updated figures could have a considerable impact, especially as foreign investors look at the country in a different, far more rosy light.

After all, statistics and economic analyses affect policies. Reliable figures can be crucial in helping actors − whether governments, individuals, corporations or multilateral organisations − make the right decisions, while unreliable ones can do the very opposite. When it comes to many countries, not least Eritrea, a great deal of caution needs to be taken before attempting any kind of shot in the dark.

Think Africa Press welcomes inquiries regarding the republication of its articles. If you would like to republish this or any other article for re-print, syndication or educational purposes, please contact: editor@thinkafricapress.com.

aseye.asena@gmail.com

Review overview
24 COMMENTS
  • Nahom April 12, 2014

    The Horn of Africa nation is deeply isolated internationally and is considered to have one of the worst records in the world when it comes to civil liberties, political rights and domestic freedoms.
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    With virtually no data to work with, it unsurprising that analysts also tend to shy away from the country. In continent-wide studies, Eritrea is often colored in grey to demarcate ‘no data’, while even multilateral organizations such as the African Development Bank sometimes have to release reports that pretend Eritrea does not exist.

    ALWAYS THE PRETEXT OF THE MAFIA REGIME IS “SELF RELIANCE” WHAT A MISERY.

  • Michael April 12, 2014

    This article is well written and I admire the writer’s intellectual honesty and impartial analysis. If we have writers like this guy who tells the citations as what it is rather than as what the Mafia group preaches,and repeat his hollow Economic Miracles we wouldn’t be where we are now.
    Eritreans want to camouflage the real problems we face and talk about side shows. The dictator is lucky from the start, at his early stage on the struggle, there were women who work domestic work in Beirut and Italy to support his struggle giving their wage and Gold ornaments (shilimaten). Then,he masterminded how to manipulate the students who come to study abroad by giving him their hard earned money be it from the Arab world or Western countries, then Finally,when refugees scattered all over the world, he lured them to invest in Eritrean housing and introduced the 2% tax. Now, everyone who fled has to support his family back home by sending remittance.
    So, to conclude my argument, when was this inept leader have a plan to introduce economic policy and create jobs for the nation. The only thing he knows one thing is to beg from his people abroad and feed his clueless army to intimidate and terrorize the population. Second, he knows how to shutdown any meaningful jobs be it construction or fishing or any kind of midsize company so that he can rule by impunity.
    This is the sad part of Eritrea and Eritreans are fighting on a side show instead of tackling the real problem and read off this maniac.

  • Fanko April 13, 2014

    Thank you weysebdeqey,

    Weysebdeqey Mahbula wrote:

    ኣንታ ዝኽረ ልቦና፣

    እንታይ ጌርናካ ኢና እቲ ሕማቕ ናይ ኢትዮጵያ ኮሎኒ ከለና ተዘክረና።ህዝብና ማዕረ ክንደይ ባዕሊጉ ከም ዝነበረ ኣይትዝክርን ዲኻ፧ ደረት ዘይብሉ ብዕልግና ሱቕ ኢልካ ፣
    ጣፍ ክም ልብኻ፣
    ሽኮር ከም ልብኻ ፣
    ቆልዑ ስድርኦም የዕብይዎም ማንም ደቅኻ ካብ ትሕቲ ዓራት ጎሲሱ ኣውጺኡ ንውግእ ዝሰዶም የለ ፣ጅግንነት ዘይነበሮ ጊዜ። ሎሚ ግን ኩሉ ነገር ተሰሪዕካን ኣርባዕተ ሰዓት ተጸቢኻን፣ብስነስርዓት ሓንቲ ባኒ ንሓሙሽተ ቤተሰብ። እቲ ብረሲደንትና ከምቲ ኢየሱስ ብኽልተ ጎጎን ሓሙሽተ ዓሳን ንሓሙሽተ ሽሕ ህዝቢ ዘብልዔ ብረሲደንትና እሰያስ ግን ንሓሙሽተ ሚልዮን ህዝቢ የጥሚ ፣ምኽንያቱ ብስብሒ ልቡ ተዓቢሱ መታን ከይመውት።ከምቲ ኣብ ኣማሪካ OBAMA CARE ዘሎ, ኣብ ኤርትራና ውን MUDADA CARE ኣለና !!! እልልልልልልልል
    ወላዲ ኣዕጽምቲ ደቁ ክደሊ በረኻ ክንዲ ዝወፍር ሰብ ተባላሽዩ ፣
    ኣዝማድካ ምብጻሕ፣
    ብበትኽስያንን ሕጊ መስጊድን ተመርኲስካ ተፋቲኻ መርዓ ምግባር ።
    ብሓቂ ጀግንነትን ሞትን ዘይብሉ ሕማቕ እዋን ኔሩ።ሰብሲ ድሙ ድሙ ስትዩ ዓወት ንሓፋሽ ኢሉ ተመርዕዩ ኣብ ሰሳልስቲ ሰበይቱ እናፈትሔ ክምርዖ ከሎ እዩ ናይ ጀጋኑን ተቓለስትን እምበር፣እቲ ብጊዜ ኮሎኒ ኢትዮጵያ ዝነበረ ጅግንነትን ውግእን ሞትን ኣካላትካ ምቝራጽን ዘይነበሮ ሕማቕ እዋን ኣይተዘክረና።
    ኣብቲ ሕማቕ ናይ ኮሎኒ ኢትዮጵያ ጊዜ ,
    ሰብ ከም ናይ ላምፔዱሳ ኣብ ባሕሪ ኣይሕምብስ ፣
    ስቕ ኢልካ ቦሪንግ ይብሉ ደቅና ኣሰልቻዊ ጊዜ እዩ ኔሩ።
    ወጻኢ እንተደሊኻ ኣብ ክንዲ በታ ጸጋ ኤርትራ ዝኾነት ,
    ገመል ተወጢሕካ ብበረኻ ትወጽእ ተጠሊዕካ ብኣይራቦርቶ፣
    ኣቤት ሕማቕ ጊዜ ዝኽረ ልቦናየ ኣይተዘክረና ።ብጊዜ ኮሎኒ ኢትዮጵያ፣ህዝቢ ዋጋ ስለ ዘየውጽእ ንራሻይዳ ኣይሽየጥ ፣ንበደዊን ኣይሽየጥ ኤህ ኮሎኒ ኢትዮጵያስ ኢዶም ኣይስኣኑ።
    ዝኽረ ልቦና ወደይ እዛ ሕስምቲ እዋን ሓደራ ከይተልዕላ፣
    ህዝብና ንመዓልቲ ሓንቲ ጊዜ ፣ኣብ ዓዱ ብርስንን ሓምሊ ኣድግን እናበልዔ ብጥዕና ከይነብር,……………………….. ንሽዋ ኸይዱ ንምዓልቲ ሰለስተ ጊዜ፣ጮማ እናበልዔ ብኮሌስተራል /Cholesterol ተወዲኡ።
    እውይ ስጋ ቐሺ ምሕጹን… ንብዓት እኳ ስዒሩኒ !!!!!!
    ዝኽረ ልቦናየ ሓደራ ነቲ ሕማቕ እዋን ከይተልዕሎ ብቐሺ ሓንጣል ይግዝተካ !!!

    • rezen April 13, 2014

      Dear Weysebdeqey Mahbula,

      What can I say! How can I praise you! What an intellect! What a worthy language! A beautiful ancient language, yet rejected by the so-called “intellectuals” and by those who had, and still have, parochial agenda for seemingly time immemorial! What a curse!
      Indeed, Weysebdeqey!!!!!
      Bless YOU, WM

    • peace April 19, 2014

      what a writer you are man!Who could have compare it like that.I read some thing different today.It really make sense.Guys this is a new way to post a comment.And you know what you get some one to read your comment until the end.short and precise.and it is in tigrigna.people tends to read there language first.

  • think April 13, 2014

    Are you saying Eritrea’s economy is not as bad as we think?

  • Ateshim April 13, 2014

    dear Fanko, you are right. After a very long time of stress you make me laugh. One supporter of Higdef told me that Issayas is doing bad things just to save us from misery. By making our belly empty, said the supporter, he is protecting us from overweight

  • Yerhiwo April 13, 2014

    There is no viable economy in Eritrea. The only business is human trafficking, bribe, money laundering, torture, jail construction, unused road construction, propaganda, etc. The educated people in economics such as Dr. Wolday Futur and Dr. Giorgis are marginalized and are not working in their field or have no authority in decision making. The economy, the money, the commerce is controlled by Hagos Kisha (a n on-Eritrean HGDEF treasurer), who is more than a minister and use to steal from EPLF members in the 80’s and also steal money fro a stores in DC.

    How can a guy who can’t read and spell the word “economics” control Eritrean economy and its data. The guys was stealing money in hundreds from his boss in the 1980’s, what do you think he will do with the millions that belong to Eritrea?

    This is what we have in Eritrea now! No data, no budget and no nothing!

    • Genet-orginal April 14, 2014

      Yerhiwo
      So, Eritrea has KLEPTOMANIA for a treasurer. What a mess.

      • Yerhiwo April 15, 2014

        Genet-original…..it took me a minute to find what “KLEPTOMANIA” is.

        Yes that is him (Hagos Kisha) our treasurer, economist, minister of commerce etc. A thief originally from Tigray..working hard to rip off Eritrean wealth to off shore banks…to help Wedi Berad and his family.

  • Yerhiwo April 13, 2014

    There is no viable economy in Eritrea. The only business is human trafficking, bribe, money laundering, torture, jail construction, unused road construction, propaganda, etc. The educated people in economics such as Dr. Wolday Futur and Dr. Giorgis are marginalized and are not working in their field or have no authority in decision making. The economy, the money, the commerce is controlled by Hagos Kisha (a non-Eritrean HGDEF treasurer), who is more than a minister and use to steal from EPLF members in the 80′s and also steal money from stores in DC.

    How can a guy who can’t read and spell the word “economics” control Eritrean economy and its data. The guy was stealing money in hundreds from his boss in the 1980′s, what do you think he will do with the millions that belong to Eritrea?

    This is what we have in Eritrea now! No data, no budget and no nothing!

  • weygud April 14, 2014

    Unofficial sources tell that most of the households receive from abroad $350 per month in Asmara. This is a news for me. The writer probably doesnot know the majority of the capital residents have no support from diaspora. Therefore, it tends to seem layman’s analysis in the case of Eritrean economy in particular.

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