USF St. Petersburg campus Honors Program Theses (Undergraduate)

Authors

Hashim A. Ahmed

First Advisor

Michael Loewy, Ph.D Associate Professor; Department of Economics (chairman)

Second Advisor

Rebecca Lee Harris, Ph.D Research Director; Globalization Research Center

Third Advisor

A.N.V. Rao, Ph.D Professor; Department of Mathematics

Publisher

University of South Florida St. Petersburg

Document Type

Thesis

Date Available

2012-04-04

Publication Date

2004

Date Issued

2004-05-03

Abstract

Policy reforms are an integral and continuing features of development economics. These reforms are motivated by a variety of factors like adjustment to debt crisis and recunent external price shocks, the failure of central planning in alleviating poverty and as an approach to accelerated economic growth, the continuing push for democratization which places poverty issues more prominent and the advance in economic theory are but a few. In the case of Ethiopia, the reason is more mundane. Although all of the above factors no doubt play a crucial role in the ongoing debate on the country's economic policies, the motivation to reform the land tenure policy largely comes from the desire to see Ethiopians feed themselves. Here is a country whose nearly seventy five million people live on the margins of life and death caused by hunger and famine. Ethiopia's agricultural sector is chronically deficient and year after year severe famine is averted through international food aid. What can Ethiopians do to change this sony state of affairs? Can policy reforms address these issues and if so what are they and how can they be implemented?

Comments

A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the University Honors Program, University of South Florida St. Petersburg.

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Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.

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