Ethiopia has announced a broad and comprehensive package of new laws and directives aimed at fundamentally restructuring its economy, labor market, and regulatory environment. These reforms are part of the government’s sustained Home-Grown Economic Reform (HGER) agenda, supported by partners like the IMF, which seeks to accelerate the nation’s transformation toward a private sector-led, resilient, and inclusive economy. The sweeping changes cover multiple sectors and are designed to eliminate market distortions, enhance the investment climate, and improve overall macroeconomic stability.
The new directives bring significant changes to both the fiscal and professional sectors. In taxation, reforms include tightening controls on non-residents by reducing the Permanent Establishment threshold to 91 days, expanding the tax net to capture revenue from e-commerce and digital services, and introducing a Minimum Alternative Tax (MAT) of 2.5% on annual turnover for certain taxpayers. In the labour market, the government is implementing policies to strengthen workers’ rights and improve employment conditions, including new regulations for overseas employment agencies and a long-standing commitment to establishing a revised minimum wage based on economic performance.These reforms are crucial for addressing structural challenges such as high inflation, foreign currency scarcity, and elevated debt, which have historically constrained private sector growth. By streamlining business processes, allowing foreign participation in previously restricted sectors (like trade and banking), and investing in human capital and digital infrastructure, Ethiopia is laying the foundation for sustained productivity gains and positioning itself as one of Africa’s most dynamic economies.



