prashant
commited on
Commit
•
570b6e4
1
Parent(s):
e1616b2
updating file structure
Browse files- appStore/img/giz_sdsn.jpg +0 -3
- appStore/img/paris.png +0 -3
- appStore/img/pic1.png +0 -3
- appStore/info.py +2 -7
- appStore/multiapp.py +2 -2
- appStore/sdg_analysis.py +7 -5
- docStore/img/giz_sdsn.jpg +0 -0
- {appStore → docStore}/img/giz_sdsn_small.jpg +0 -0
- docStore/img/paris.png +0 -0
- docStore/img/pic1.png +0 -0
- {ndcs → docStore/ndcs}/cca.txt +0 -0
- {ndcs → docStore/ndcs}/ccm.txt +0 -0
- {ndcs → docStore/ndcs}/countryList.txt +0 -0
- {sample → docStore/sample}/Ethiopia_s_2021_10 Year Development Plan.txt +736 -736
- {sample → docStore/sample}/South Africa_s Low Emission Development Strategy.txt +0 -0
- {sample → docStore/sample}/keywordexample.json +0 -0
- udfPreprocess/paramconfig.cfg → paramconfig.cfg +0 -0
- {udfPreprocess → utils}/__init__.py +0 -0
- {udfPreprocess → utils}/preprocessing.py +2 -3
- {udfPreprocess → utils}/sdg_classifier.py +3 -5
- {udfPreprocess → utils}/search.py +0 -0
- {udfPreprocess → utils}/uploadAndExample.py +2 -2
appStore/img/giz_sdsn.jpg
DELETED
Git LFS Details
|
appStore/img/paris.png
DELETED
Git LFS Details
|
appStore/img/pic1.png
DELETED
Git LFS Details
|
appStore/info.py
CHANGED
@@ -2,12 +2,7 @@ import streamlit as st
|
|
2 |
|
3 |
|
4 |
def app():
|
5 |
-
|
6 |
-
# file = st.session_state['file']
|
7 |
-
# else:
|
8 |
-
# st.sidebar.markdown(" :cloud: Upload document ")
|
9 |
-
# uploaded_file = st.sidebar.file_uploader('', type=['pdf', 'docx', 'txt']) #Upload PDF File
|
10 |
-
# st.session_state['file'] = uploaded_file
|
11 |
|
12 |
with open('style.css') as f:
|
13 |
st.markdown(f"<style>{f.read()}</style>", unsafe_allow_html=True)
|
@@ -39,7 +34,7 @@ The collaboration aims to determine the potential of NLP methods for tracking po
|
|
39 |
<br>
|
40 |
"""
|
41 |
st.markdown(intro, unsafe_allow_html=True)
|
42 |
-
st.image("
|
43 |
#st.subheader("Methodology")
|
44 |
#st.write("Each sentence in the generated answer ends with a coloured tooltip; the colour ranges from red to green. "
|
45 |
# "The tooltip contains a value representing answer sentence similarity to a specific sentence in the "
|
|
|
2 |
|
3 |
|
4 |
def app():
|
5 |
+
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
6 |
|
7 |
with open('style.css') as f:
|
8 |
st.markdown(f"<style>{f.read()}</style>", unsafe_allow_html=True)
|
|
|
34 |
<br>
|
35 |
"""
|
36 |
st.markdown(intro, unsafe_allow_html=True)
|
37 |
+
st.image("docStore/img/pic1.png", caption="NDC Coherence")
|
38 |
#st.subheader("Methodology")
|
39 |
#st.write("Each sentence in the generated answer ends with a coloured tooltip; the colour ranges from red to green. "
|
40 |
# "The tooltip contains a value representing answer sentence similarity to a specific sentence in the "
|
appStore/multiapp.py
CHANGED
@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
|
|
3 |
import streamlit as st
|
4 |
from PIL import Image
|
5 |
from streamlit_option_menu import option_menu
|
6 |
-
from
|
7 |
|
8 |
class MultiApp:
|
9 |
"""Framework for combining multiple streamlit applications.
|
@@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ class MultiApp:
|
|
45 |
def run(self):
|
46 |
|
47 |
st.sidebar.write(format_func=lambda app: app['title'])
|
48 |
-
image = Image.open('
|
49 |
st.sidebar.image(image)
|
50 |
#st.sidebar.markdown("## 📌 Pages ")
|
51 |
#app = st.sidebar.radio(
|
|
|
3 |
import streamlit as st
|
4 |
from PIL import Image
|
5 |
from streamlit_option_menu import option_menu
|
6 |
+
from utils.uploadAndExample import add_upload
|
7 |
|
8 |
class MultiApp:
|
9 |
"""Framework for combining multiple streamlit applications.
|
|
|
45 |
def run(self):
|
46 |
|
47 |
st.sidebar.write(format_func=lambda app: app['title'])
|
48 |
+
image = Image.open('docStore/img/giz_sdsn.jpg')
|
49 |
st.sidebar.image(image)
|
50 |
#st.sidebar.markdown("## 📌 Pages ")
|
51 |
#app = st.sidebar.radio(
|
appStore/sdg_analysis.py
CHANGED
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
|
|
1 |
# set path
|
2 |
import glob, os, sys;
|
3 |
-
sys.path.append('../
|
4 |
|
5 |
#import helper
|
6 |
|
@@ -14,9 +14,8 @@ import docx
|
|
14 |
from docx.shared import Inches
|
15 |
from docx.shared import Pt
|
16 |
from docx.enum.style import WD_STYLE_TYPE
|
17 |
-
from
|
18 |
-
from
|
19 |
-
import configparser
|
20 |
import tempfile
|
21 |
import sqlite3
|
22 |
import logging
|
@@ -35,7 +34,10 @@ def app():
|
|
35 |
|
36 |
st.write(
|
37 |
"""
|
38 |
-
The *Analyse Policy Document* app is an easy-to-use interface built
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
39 |
""")
|
40 |
st.markdown("")
|
41 |
|
|
|
1 |
# set path
|
2 |
import glob, os, sys;
|
3 |
+
sys.path.append('../utils')
|
4 |
|
5 |
#import helper
|
6 |
|
|
|
14 |
from docx.shared import Inches
|
15 |
from docx.shared import Pt
|
16 |
from docx.enum.style import WD_STYLE_TYPE
|
17 |
+
from utils.sdg_classifier import sdg_classification
|
18 |
+
from utils.sdg_classifier import runSDGPreprocessingPipeline
|
|
|
19 |
import tempfile
|
20 |
import sqlite3
|
21 |
import logging
|
|
|
34 |
|
35 |
st.write(
|
36 |
"""
|
37 |
+
The *Analyse Policy Document* app is an easy-to-use interface built \
|
38 |
+
in Streamlit for analyzing policy documents with respect to SDG \
|
39 |
+
Classification for the paragraphs/texts in the document - \
|
40 |
+
developed by GIZ Data and the Sustainable Development Solution Network. \n
|
41 |
""")
|
42 |
st.markdown("")
|
43 |
|
docStore/img/giz_sdsn.jpg
ADDED
{appStore → docStore}/img/giz_sdsn_small.jpg
RENAMED
File without changes
|
docStore/img/paris.png
ADDED
docStore/img/pic1.png
ADDED
{ndcs → docStore/ndcs}/cca.txt
RENAMED
File without changes
|
{ndcs → docStore/ndcs}/ccm.txt
RENAMED
File without changes
|
{ndcs → docStore/ndcs}/countryList.txt
RENAMED
File without changes
|
{sample → docStore/sample}/Ethiopia_s_2021_10 Year Development Plan.txt
RENAMED
@@ -1,737 +1,737 @@
|
|
1 |
-
Ethiopia 2030: The Pathway to Prosperity
|
2 |
-
Ten Years Perspective Development Plan (2021 � 2030)
|
3 |
-
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
4 |
-
2. Strategic pillars
|
5 |
-
3. Departures
|
6 |
-
4. Macroeconomic goals
|
7 |
-
5. Implications of the COVID-19 pandemic and necessary mitigation measures
|
8 |
-
6. Potentials/capabilities
|
9 |
-
7. Focus areas
|
10 |
-
7.1. Productive sectors
|
11 |
-
7.2. Services sector
|
12 |
-
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
13 |
-
8. Balanced and competitive development (nationally, regionally and locally)
|
14 |
-
9. Monitoring and Evaluation
|
15 |
-
Content
|
16 |
-
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
17 |
-
Poverty Reduction (%)
|
18 |
-
Key performances of previous years
|
19 |
-
45.5 44.2
|
20 |
-
38.7
|
21 |
-
29.6
|
22 |
-
23.5
|
23 |
-
19
|
24 |
-
0
|
25 |
-
5
|
26 |
-
10
|
27 |
-
15
|
28 |
-
20
|
29 |
-
25
|
30 |
-
30
|
31 |
-
35
|
32 |
-
40
|
33 |
-
45
|
34 |
-
50
|
35 |
-
1994 2000 2005 2011 2016 2020
|
36 |
-
Percent
|
37 |
-
Year
|
38 |
-
Proportion of people living below poverty line
|
39 |
-
10.5
|
40 |
-
8.8
|
41 |
-
10.1
|
42 |
-
7.7
|
43 |
-
9
|
44 |
-
5.19-6.20
|
45 |
-
0 2 4 6 8 10 12
|
46 |
-
GTP I: 2011-2015
|
47 |
-
GTP II: 2015/16
|
48 |
-
GTP II: 2016/17
|
49 |
-
GTP II: 2017/18
|
50 |
-
GTP II: 2018/19
|
51 |
-
GTP II: 2019/20 (projection, with
|
52 |
-
COVID-19)
|
53 |
-
GDP growth rate (%)
|
54 |
-
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
55 |
-
Share of economic sectors in GDP (%) Merchandise export as % of GDP
|
56 |
-
8.66
|
57 |
-
7.33
|
58 |
-
6.57
|
59 |
-
5.93
|
60 |
-
4.91
|
61 |
-
3.86 3.56 3.37
|
62 |
-
2.77
|
63 |
-
0
|
64 |
-
1
|
65 |
-
2
|
66 |
-
3
|
67 |
-
4
|
68 |
-
5
|
69 |
-
6
|
70 |
-
7
|
71 |
-
8
|
72 |
-
9
|
73 |
-
10
|
74 |
-
Percent
|
75 |
-
Year
|
76 |
-
46.9
|
77 |
-
45
|
78 |
-
43.5
|
79 |
-
41.4
|
80 |
-
39.5
|
81 |
-
37.1 35.9
|
82 |
-
34.5
|
83 |
-
32.8
|
84 |
-
13.4
|
85 |
-
15
|
86 |
-
17.3
|
87 |
-
18.8
|
88 |
-
21
|
89 |
-
23.5
|
90 |
-
25.7 26.9 27.8
|
91 |
-
4.7 4.8 5 5.3 5.6 6.1 6.9 6.8 6.8
|
92 |
-
7.1
|
93 |
-
8.6
|
94 |
-
10.7 12
|
95 |
-
14.2
|
96 |
-
16.2
|
97 |
-
17.8 19.1 20.1
|
98 |
-
39.8 40.1 39.2 39.8 39.4 38.4 38.6 39.4
|
99 |
-
0
|
100 |
-
5
|
101 |
-
10
|
102 |
-
15
|
103 |
-
20
|
104 |
-
25
|
105 |
-
30
|
106 |
-
35
|
107 |
-
40
|
108 |
-
45
|
109 |
-
50
|
110 |
-
2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 2014/15 2015/16 2016/17 2017/18 2018/19
|
111 |
-
Percent
|
112 |
-
Agriculture Industry Manufacturing Construction Services
|
113 |
-
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
114 |
-
Labour force participation (2013)
|
115 |
-
73%
|
116 |
-
7%
|
117 |
-
20%
|
118 |
-
Agriculture
|
119 |
-
Industry
|
120 |
-
Services
|
121 |
-
7%
|
122 |
-
22%
|
123 |
-
71%
|
124 |
-
Agriculture
|
125 |
-
Industry
|
126 |
-
Services
|
127 |
-
Urban labour force participation (2013)
|
128 |
-
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
129 |
-
High and increasing Unemployment Rate
|
130 |
-
� Urban unemployment rate = 19.1% in 2018
|
131 |
-
� Youth unemployment rate = 25.3 %
|
132 |
-
? Male = 18.6%
|
133 |
-
? Female 30.9 %
|
134 |
-
� Rural unemployment rate = 2% in 2013
|
135 |
-
� Declining per capita rural land creating
|
136 |
-
disguised unemployment
|
137 |
-
402,869
|
138 |
-
471,535
|
139 |
-
Male Female Total Male Female Total
|
140 |
-
2014 2018
|
141 |
-
15-19 yr. 20-24 yr. 25-29 yr. Linear (20-24 yr.)
|
142 |
-
Number of unemployed people in urban areas
|
143 |
-
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
144 |
-
Challenges
|
145 |
-
1. Macroeconomic imbalances
|
146 |
-
?Sustained high inflation
|
147 |
-
?High and rising unemployment especially
|
148 |
-
in urban areas
|
149 |
-
?High and rising debt burden
|
150 |
-
?Chronic foreign currency shortage
|
151 |
-
?Sluggish (though encouraging) rate of
|
152 |
-
structural change
|
153 |
-
2. Vulnerability to shocks (COVID-19, Climate
|
154 |
-
changes, Desert Locust infestation, etc)
|
155 |
-
3. Poor quality and high inequity in
|
156 |
-
infrastructure projects
|
157 |
-
4. Poor quality services in health and
|
158 |
-
education
|
159 |
-
� High repetition and dropout rates from school
|
160 |
-
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
161 |
-
� Poor quality of growth and slow
|
162 |
-
structural change
|
163 |
-
� Excessive aid and loan
|
164 |
-
dependence for financing
|
165 |
-
infrastructural and construction
|
166 |
-
investments
|
167 |
-
� Limited success in expanding
|
168 |
-
manufacturing and modern
|
169 |
-
agriculture which have high job
|
170 |
-
creation potentials
|
171 |
-
� Weak institutional capacity as
|
172 |
-
the main culprit of all failures
|
173 |
-
? Provision of quality services
|
174 |
-
(electricity, water, telephone,
|
175 |
-
internet)
|
176 |
-
? Creation of enough jobs and
|
177 |
-
improved living standards
|
178 |
-
? Generation of reliable foreign
|
179 |
-
exchange revenue and debtsustainable
|
180 |
-
national economic
|
181 |
-
capacity
|
182 |
-
? Completion of development
|
183 |
-
projects and investment plans
|
184 |
-
under public-private
|
185 |
-
partnerships
|
186 |
-
� Low reward for merit, productivity and effort
|
187 |
-
while low disincentive for laziness, wastefulness
|
188 |
-
and corruption
|
189 |
-
� Slow institutional change and transformation in:
|
190 |
-
? Government policies
|
191 |
-
? Investor attitude
|
192 |
-
? Youth behaviour
|
193 |
-
? Role of the intellectuals
|
194 |
-
� The need for sustained increase in production
|
195 |
-
and productivity
|
196 |
-
� The need to set a common national vision to
|
197 |
-
achieve major successes with consensus and
|
198 |
-
popular legitimacy
|
199 |
-
Major areas of failure in the economy
|
200 |
-
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
201 |
-
� Poor quality of growth and slow
|
202 |
-
structural change
|
203 |
-
� Excessive aid and loan
|
204 |
-
dependence for financing
|
205 |
-
infrastructural and construction
|
206 |
-
investments
|
207 |
-
� Limited success in expanding
|
208 |
-
manufacturing and modern
|
209 |
-
agriculture which have high job
|
210 |
-
creation potentials
|
211 |
-
� Weak institutional capacity as
|
212 |
-
the main culprit of all failures
|
213 |
-
? Provision of quality services
|
214 |
-
(electricity, water, telephone,
|
215 |
-
internet)
|
216 |
-
? Creation of enough jobs and
|
217 |
-
improved living standards
|
218 |
-
? Generation of reliable foreign
|
219 |
-
exchange revenue and debtsustainable
|
220 |
-
national economic
|
221 |
-
capacity
|
222 |
-
? Completion of development
|
223 |
-
projects and investment plans
|
224 |
-
under public-private
|
225 |
-
partnerships
|
226 |
-
� Low reward for merit, productivity and effort
|
227 |
-
while low disincentive for laziness, wastefulness
|
228 |
-
and corruption
|
229 |
-
� Slow institutional change and transformation in:
|
230 |
-
? Government policies
|
231 |
-
? Investor attitude
|
232 |
-
? Youth behaviour
|
233 |
-
? Role of the intellectuals
|
234 |
-
� The need for sustained increase in production
|
235 |
-
and productivity
|
236 |
-
� The need to set a common national vision to
|
237 |
-
achieve major successes with consensus and
|
238 |
-
popular legitimacy
|
239 |
-
Major areas of failure in the economy
|
240 |
-
2. Departures
|
241 |
-
1. Emphasis on quality of economic growth
|
242 |
-
2. Participation and coordination of sectors in the planning process
|
243 |
-
3. Sectoral linkages and multi-sectoral development focus
|
244 |
-
4. Preparation of national development corridors based on development potentials
|
245 |
-
5. Focus on solving institutional bottlenecks
|
246 |
-
6. The ongoing home grown economic reform programme as a sprinting board
|
247 |
-
7. Emphasis on resilience building, innovation and entrepreneurship
|
248 |
-
3. Strategic pillars
|
249 |
-
1. Ensure quality growth
|
250 |
-
2. Improve productivity and competitiveness
|
251 |
-
3. Undertake institutional transformation
|
252 |
-
4. Ensure private sector's leadership in the economy
|
253 |
-
5. Ensure equitable participation of women and children
|
254 |
-
6. Build climate resilient green economy
|
255 |
-
3. Strategic pillars
|
256 |
-
� Increasing export revenues and substituting imports by
|
257 |
-
reducing production costs
|
258 |
-
� Availing quality and massive infrastructure
|
259 |
-
? Linking infrastructural development with development corridors
|
260 |
-
� Producing required human resources with quality
|
261 |
-
� Producing enough and quality human resources
|
262 |
-
� Prioritizing innovative production systems
|
263 |
-
� Linking incentives with export revenue and job creation
|
264 |
-
performances
|
265 |
-
� Modernizing and enhancing the logistic system
|
266 |
-
� Creating technological competences needed for longterm
|
267 |
-
growth
|
268 |
-
� The economic growth should ensure:
|
269 |
-
? Participation of all citizens and equitable utilization of the
|
270 |
-
growth proceeds
|
271 |
-
? Improved standard of living of every citizen
|
272 |
-
? Reduced poverty in all indicators
|
273 |
-
? Reduced inflation and unemployment
|
274 |
-
� The economic growth should lead to increased
|
275 |
-
aggregate supply
|
276 |
-
� Focus on modern agriculture, manufacturing and
|
277 |
-
mining
|
278 |
-
� Emphasis on exploiting the sources of growth through
|
279 |
-
structural change
|
280 |
-
1.Ensuring quality economic growth 2. Raising production and productivity
|
281 |
-
3. Strategic pillars
|
282 |
-
� Build democratic and judicial institutions that ensure elite bargain,
|
283 |
-
national consensus, common vision and government legitimacy
|
284 |
-
� Build private sector and competition friendly bureaucracy
|
285 |
-
� Coordinate with parents, the society and teachers to make
|
286 |
-
educational institutions centers of excellence and virtuous citizens
|
287 |
-
� Coordinate with parents as well as social and religious leaders to
|
288 |
-
encourage religious institutions and their teachings contribute
|
289 |
-
towards poverty reduction efforts
|
290 |
-
� Prepare policies, strategies and legal frameworks for achieving
|
291 |
-
prosperity
|
292 |
-
� Increased focus on innovation and research
|
293 |
-
� Creating strong social security system
|
294 |
-
3. Institutional Transformation 4. Private sector's leadership in the economy
|
295 |
-
� Create conducive investment climate and incentivize
|
296 |
-
domestic investors in key sectors
|
297 |
-
� Build strong and market-led public-private partnerships in
|
298 |
-
order to ensure the establishment of inclusive and
|
299 |
-
pragmatic market economy
|
300 |
-
� Enhance access and quality of infrastructure to attract
|
301 |
-
quality foreign direct investment
|
302 |
-
� Identify new sources of growth, empower and stimulate
|
303 |
-
the private sector, and supplement the private sector in
|
304 |
-
strategic areas
|
305 |
-
� Emphasis for public-private partnership on problem
|
306 |
-
solving innovations and research activities
|
307 |
-
3. Strategic pillars
|
308 |
-
� Ensure gender equity in economic and social
|
309 |
-
sectors
|
310 |
-
? Participation of women at all levels of education
|
311 |
-
? Asset ownership of women
|
312 |
-
� Ensure fair participation of women and youth in
|
313 |
-
leadership and decision making positions
|
314 |
-
� Create awareness among citizens about the role of
|
315 |
-
women and youth in the country�s overall
|
316 |
-
development
|
317 |
-
� Increase basin development efforts to fight land
|
318 |
-
degradation and to reduce pollutions
|
319 |
-
� Improve productivity and reduce GHG emissions
|
320 |
-
� Increase forest protection and development
|
321 |
-
� Increase production of electricity from renewable
|
322 |
-
sources for domestic use and for export
|
323 |
-
� Focus on modern and energy saving technologies
|
324 |
-
5. Equitable participation of women and children 6. Climate resilient green economy
|
325 |
-
4. Macroeconomic Goals
|
326 |
-
Assumptions
|
327 |
-
? Requirement to significantly reduce
|
328 |
-
poverty
|
329 |
-
? Available national potentials
|
330 |
-
? Potential for investment in the economy
|
331 |
-
? Existing potentials in each sector
|
332 |
-
? Low productivity that needs to be
|
333 |
-
improved
|
334 |
-
� Make Ethiopia a middle income
|
335 |
-
economy by 2022
|
336 |
-
� Raise per capita income to USD 1,115
|
337 |
-
in 2022
|
338 |
-
? Threshold for middle-income is USD 1,026
|
339 |
-
? Plus human development index and
|
340 |
-
economic vulnerability index
|
341 |
-
� Raise per capita income to USD 2,220
|
342 |
-
by 2030
|
343 |
-
Sectoral growth Targets (2021-2030)
|
344 |
-
Assured middle- income potential
|
345 |
-
10.2%
|
346 |
-
Average
|
347 |
-
Growth
|
348 |
-
Target
|
349 |
-
Percentage of population below poverty line
|
350 |
-
4. Macroeconomic Goals
|
351 |
-
Structural change
|
352 |
-
Financing Gaps
|
353 |
-
Reduce urban unemployment to less than 9%
|
354 |
-
?1.36 million new jobs need to be
|
355 |
-
created per annum
|
356 |
-
Sectoral composition of GDP Labour force participation
|
357 |
-
Economic
|
358 |
-
Sectors
|
359 |
-
Performance Target
|
360 |
-
2011 2015 2018/19 2030
|
361 |
-
Agriculture 45 39.7 32.8 22.0
|
362 |
-
Industry 15.1 21.2 27.6 35.9
|
363 |
-
Manufacturing 4.7 5.5 6.8 17.2
|
364 |
-
Services 39.9 39 39.4 42.1
|
365 |
-
5. Implications of the COVID-19 pandemic and necessary mitigation measures
|
366 |
-
� GDP growth for 2019/20 fiscal year is projected to be lower than its target of 9.0% by between 2.81
|
367 |
-
and 3.80 percentage points (equivalent to 58.3 - 78.8 billion birr) due to COVID-19 pandemic
|
368 |
-
� If the current scenario continues, next year�s GDP growth could decline by 2.8 percentage points
|
369 |
-
� Returning the economy to its high growth trajectory requires focusing on sectors with high
|
370 |
-
productivity and job creation potentials
|
371 |
-
� Public investment should focus on empowering the private sector
|
372 |
-
� Promoting both domestic and foreign investments with the right set of incentives (merit based)
|
373 |
-
� Modernizing production systems and improving uptake of technology
|
374 |
-
� Conducting demand analysis for export commodities to remedy for the declining trend in exports
|
375 |
-
and foreign exchange earnings.
|
376 |
-
6. Potentials
|
377 |
-
� Endowment of various natural resources contributing to the growth potential
|
378 |
-
� Huge unutilized arable land creates great potential for the success of the plan
|
379 |
-
� Endowment of gemstones, ornamental, energy, metals, and metallic minerals
|
380 |
-
� Gold, coal, iron ore, potash, tantalum, marble, petroleum and other natural resources
|
381 |
-
Natural
|
382 |
-
Resources
|
383 |
-
� Large youth population and potential for demographic dividend
|
384 |
-
� Cumulative capacity in education and health
|
385 |
-
� Positive attitude and noble culture of reaching agreement among citizens
|
386 |
-
Human
|
387 |
-
capital
|
388 |
-
6. Potentials
|
389 |
-
Built physical and material capitals
|
390 |
-
?Transport and communication
|
391 |
-
? Irrigation infrastructures for modern agriculture
|
392 |
-
?Industrial Parks
|
393 |
-
?Mega energy infrastructures
|
394 |
-
Physical
|
395 |
-
capital
|
396 |
-
Unexploited
|
397 |
-
growth
|
398 |
-
potentials
|
399 |
-
� Utilizing the tourism potential through modernization
|
400 |
-
� Using the mining subsector as a source of input as well as a competitive industry in its
|
401 |
-
own right
|
402 |
-
6. Potentials
|
403 |
-
� Solving supply side bottlenecks to satisfy the existing demand
|
404 |
-
� Improving international acceptance and reliable partnerships
|
405 |
-
? The �medemer�/synergy philosophy
|
406 |
-
? The ongoing political reform measures
|
407 |
-
? The Homegrown Economic Reform programme
|
408 |
-
� Increased finance from partners and multilateral institutions
|
409 |
-
? Increased availability of foreign exchange
|
410 |
-
? Reduced debt stress for the short to medium term
|
411 |
-
? Increased potential for development
|
412 |
-
Increased
|
413 |
-
demand as
|
414 |
-
potential
|
415 |
-
Political Capital
|
416 |
-
Continental
|
417 |
-
and regional
|
418 |
-
integrations
|
419 |
-
� Regional and continental economic integration agreements
|
420 |
-
� International and continental free trade agreements
|
421 |
-
6. Potentials
|
422 |
-
Low
|
423 |
-
technology as
|
424 |
-
a potential
|
425 |
-
� Undeniably low status of technological development
|
426 |
-
� International mobility and spillover effect of technology
|
427 |
-
� Potential for development and catching up by filling the technological gaps
|
428 |
-
� Doubling crop productivity from the current 24-36 quintals per hectare will result
|
429 |
-
in 7% increase in crop production
|
430 |
-
� Raise the production efficiency of manufacturing from the current 50% to 80%
|
431 |
-
7. Focus Areas
|
432 |
-
7.1. Productive sectors: agriculture, manufacturing, mining
|
433 |
-
7.2. Service sector: tourism
|
434 |
-
7.3. Enabling sectors: energy, transport, sustainable finance,
|
435 |
-
innovation and technology, urban development, irrigation,
|
436 |
-
human capital development
|
437 |
-
7.1. Productive sectors
|
438 |
-
Agriculture Objectives
|
439 |
-
1. Free agriculture from rain dependence
|
440 |
-
2. Agricultural mechanization services
|
441 |
-
3. Contract farming, cluster approach and
|
442 |
-
land consolidation
|
443 |
-
4. Livestock, animal feed and animal health
|
444 |
-
5. Horticulture (irrigation and urban farming)
|
445 |
-
6. Private sector participation
|
446 |
-
7. Institutional implementation capacity
|
447 |
-
8. Climate resilient sustainable agricultural
|
448 |
-
development
|
449 |
-
1. Improve income and livelihood options for farming and pastoral
|
450 |
-
communities through increased productivity and competitiveness
|
451 |
-
2. Modernize agriculture and ensure national food and nutrition security
|
452 |
-
3. Raise export of agricultural output and substitute imports
|
453 |
-
4. Make agriculture a viable and profitable enterprise through value addition
|
454 |
-
5. Create rural employment opportunities
|
455 |
-
6. Enhance livestock health access and quality
|
456 |
-
7. Preserve animal genetic resources and increase pastoral research
|
457 |
-
8. Improve the development of animal feed and access to markets
|
458 |
-
9. Develop livestock specific extension package for each livestock type
|
459 |
-
Focus Areas
|
460 |
-
7.1. Productive sector
|
461 |
-
Manufacturing Industry
|
462 |
-
Objectives
|
463 |
-
1. Production of quality and competitive food, textile, housing and
|
464 |
-
pharmaceutical products for export and domestic markets
|
465 |
-
2. Production and productivity of existing manufacturing industries
|
466 |
-
3. Utilization of locally available inputs
|
467 |
-
4. Value chains, linkages and interdependencies
|
468 |
-
5. Linkages between large scale metallurgical and engineering,
|
469 |
-
chemical and pharmaceutical industries with other industries
|
470 |
-
6. Job creation, cluster approaches and expanding small and medium
|
471 |
-
scale manufacturing
|
472 |
-
7. Private sector participation and partnership
|
473 |
-
1. Establish basis for domestic industrialization
|
474 |
-
2. Value addition through enhanced inter-sectoral
|
475 |
-
linkages
|
476 |
-
3. Enhance productivity through private sector
|
477 |
-
leadership and supportive role of the
|
478 |
-
government
|
479 |
-
? Create job opportunities for the youth leaving
|
480 |
-
agriculture and concentrating in urban areas
|
481 |
-
? Make exportable commodities internationally
|
482 |
-
competitive
|
483 |
-
? Ensure structural change
|
484 |
-
Focus areas
|
485 |
-
7.1. Productive sectors
|
486 |
-
Mining
|
487 |
-
Objectives
|
488 |
-
� Foreign exchange earning and
|
489 |
-
domestic revenues
|
490 |
-
� Increased investment in mining
|
491 |
-
� Participation of manufacturing
|
492 |
-
industries that add value
|
493 |
-
� Job creation
|
494 |
-
� Add value for improved contribution of the subsector
|
495 |
-
� Increase inter-sectoral linkages to raise raw material inputs to other
|
496 |
-
sectors
|
497 |
-
� Make mining a competent subsector and induce structural change
|
498 |
-
� Increase human resource and technological capabilities through
|
499 |
-
research and trainings
|
500 |
-
� Raise foreign exchange revenue from mining through increased
|
501 |
-
exploration and production
|
502 |
-
� Improve traditional mining production and marketing systems
|
503 |
-
� Improve the country�s geological information
|
504 |
-
Focus areas
|
505 |
-
7.2. Service sector
|
506 |
-
Tourism
|
507 |
-
Objectives
|
508 |
-
� Identification and developing destinations
|
509 |
-
� Infrastructure
|
510 |
-
� Competitiveness
|
511 |
-
?improve existing destinations
|
512 |
-
?develop new destinations
|
513 |
-
? diversify service and raise quality
|
514 |
-
� Market linkages, branding, and promotion
|
515 |
-
� Technology, research and development
|
516 |
-
� Preservation, maintenance and proper
|
517 |
-
utilization of heritage resources
|
518 |
-
� Expand job opportunities
|
519 |
-
� Raise incomes
|
520 |
-
� Build information management
|
521 |
-
systems
|
522 |
-
� Increase implementation capacity
|
523 |
-
Focus areas
|
524 |
-
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
525 |
-
Urban development
|
526 |
-
Objectives
|
527 |
-
? Prioritize productive sectors in job creation and enterprise
|
528 |
-
development plans
|
529 |
-
? Rapid development and equity goals in land provision system
|
530 |
-
? Participation of indigenous people in land redevelopment and
|
531 |
-
expansion
|
532 |
-
? Urban land registration and cadaster system, modern
|
533 |
-
property valuation
|
534 |
-
? Greenery and public spaces as well as waste disposal and
|
535 |
-
management in urban planning and implementation
|
536 |
-
? Housing development and financing options to reduce
|
537 |
-
housing shortages
|
538 |
-
? Integrated infrastructure and services provision
|
539 |
-
? Role of private sector in infrastructure development and
|
540 |
-
service provision
|
541 |
-
� Expand micro and small-scale
|
542 |
-
enterprises to reduce urban
|
543 |
-
unemployment
|
544 |
-
� Develop and avail urban land based on
|
545 |
-
demand, equity and cost effectiveness
|
546 |
-
� Make quality housing accessible both in
|
547 |
-
rural and urban areas
|
548 |
-
� Develop quality and integrated
|
549 |
-
infrastructure as well as service
|
550 |
-
provision in towns
|
551 |
-
� Improve financial management and
|
552 |
-
resource utilization in urban areas
|
553 |
-
Focus areas
|
554 |
-
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
555 |
-
Innovation and Technology
|
556 |
-
Objectives
|
557 |
-
? Access to innovation and
|
558 |
-
technological information
|
559 |
-
? Developing a digital economy
|
560 |
-
? Productivity enhancement and
|
561 |
-
competitiveness
|
562 |
-
? Build a digital economy
|
563 |
-
? Develop national scientific research and technological
|
564 |
-
capabilities
|
565 |
-
? Support problem solving research and development of
|
566 |
-
technologies necessary for raising production,
|
567 |
-
productivity and service provision
|
568 |
-
? Create jobs and capital that are based on technology
|
569 |
-
? Develop technological and data security protection
|
570 |
-
systems
|
571 |
-
Focus areas
|
572 |
-
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
573 |
-
Sustainable finance
|
574 |
-
Objectives
|
575 |
-
� Access to modern finance and saving culture in rural
|
576 |
-
areas
|
577 |
-
� Support to the private sector and corporations to
|
578 |
-
reinvest profits in productive sectors
|
579 |
-
� Role of private financial institutions in manufacturing
|
580 |
-
and agriculture
|
581 |
-
� Digital revenue collection system
|
582 |
-
� Tax equity (contraband, tax evasion, and bringing the
|
583 |
-
underground economy to the tax system)
|
584 |
-
� Domestic and foreign strategic partnerships
|
585 |
-
� Transform financing from short term to long-term,
|
586 |
-
sustainable and quality sources
|
587 |
-
� Ensure financing quality based on sectoral prioritization
|
588 |
-
and reduction of wastage
|
589 |
-
� Increase the number of domestic saving institutions both
|
590 |
-
in rural and urban areas
|
591 |
-
� Support domestic finance with foreign exchange capacity
|
592 |
-
and foreign direct investment
|
593 |
-
� Modernize domestic revenue collection system
|
594 |
-
� Raise voluntary tax payment attitude
|
595 |
-
� Bring the informal sector to the formal tax system
|
596 |
-
Focus areas
|
597 |
-
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
598 |
-
Transport
|
599 |
-
Objectives
|
600 |
-
� Access to infrastructure
|
601 |
-
� Implementation capacity
|
602 |
-
� Participation of the private sector and the general
|
603 |
-
public
|
604 |
-
� Financing capacity
|
605 |
-
� Ensure equitable access to transport infrastructure and
|
606 |
-
services
|
607 |
-
� Improve transport safety
|
608 |
-
� Make logistics services fast and reliable
|
609 |
-
� Build transport infrastructure and service that is
|
610 |
-
resilient to climate change
|
611 |
-
Focus areas
|
612 |
-
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
613 |
-
Energy
|
614 |
-
Objectives
|
615 |
-
? Equity in access to electricity services
|
616 |
-
? Energy access and quality
|
617 |
-
? Alternative sources of energy
|
618 |
-
? Reliability of electricity infrastructure
|
619 |
-
? Investment and income in energy subsector
|
620 |
-
� Ensure equitable access to transport
|
621 |
-
infrastructure and services
|
622 |
-
� Improve transport safety
|
623 |
-
� Make logistics services fast and reliable
|
624 |
-
� Build transport infrastructure and service that is
|
625 |
-
resilient to climate change
|
626 |
-
Focus areas
|
627 |
-
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
628 |
-
Irrigation
|
629 |
-
Objectives
|
630 |
-
? Medium and large scale irrigation infrastructure
|
631 |
-
? Job creation
|
632 |
-
? Share of government expenditure and alternative
|
633 |
-
financing options
|
634 |
-
? Institutional capacity and human resource
|
635 |
-
development
|
636 |
-
? Improve agricultural output and productivity
|
637 |
-
? Reduce government spending and enhance
|
638 |
-
institutional capacity and human resources
|
639 |
-
development
|
640 |
-
? Ensure the inclusion of all genders and
|
641 |
-
disabled citizens
|
642 |
-
? Develop alternative financing options for
|
643 |
-
irrigation development
|
644 |
-
Focus areas
|
645 |
-
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
646 |
-
Human capital development
|
647 |
-
Objectives
|
648 |
-
� Make education and training inclusive and equitable by
|
649 |
-
harmonizing the system with ability, need and capacity
|
650 |
-
� Develop capacity of educational institutions (teacher capacity,
|
651 |
-
inputs and technology)
|
652 |
-
� Establish education and training quality assurance system
|
653 |
-
� Avail free and compulsory education for pre-primary to junior
|
654 |
-
secondary levels and free education at the senior secondary levels
|
655 |
-
equitably
|
656 |
-
� Ensure the relevance of education and training system and
|
657 |
-
synchronize education policy with economic and social
|
658 |
-
development needs
|
659 |
-
� Make the education and training policy compatible with the
|
660 |
-
nation�s contemporary capacities as well as global and regional
|
661 |
-
market opportunities
|
662 |
-
� Enhance commitment, capability and responsibility of citizens
|
663 |
-
? Ensure equitable and quality health services
|
664 |
-
? Raise average life expectancy
|
665 |
-
? Achieve universal health coverage through
|
666 |
-
proactive and prevention health system
|
667 |
-
? Curtail preventable maternal and child deaths
|
668 |
-
? Reduce incidences of contagious and noncontagious
|
669 |
-
related diseases and deaths
|
670 |
-
? Build capacity for health tourism through
|
671 |
-
increased treatment capabilities
|
672 |
-
? Create a healthy society that is free from
|
673 |
-
addictions and use technology for supporting
|
674 |
-
knowledge led economic development
|
675 |
-
Focus areas
|
676 |
-
8 Nationally, regionally and locally balanced and competitive development
|
677 |
-
1. Lack of synchronization of investment with
|
678 |
-
resource potentials and development needs
|
679 |
-
2. Poor alignment of federal, regional and
|
680 |
-
district level investment plans with the
|
681 |
-
national development goals and envisioned
|
682 |
-
settlement patterns
|
683 |
-
3. Poor regional coordination due to low
|
684 |
-
consideration for trans-regional and
|
685 |
-
spatial issues in development plans of
|
686 |
-
regional states
|
687 |
-
4. Inter-regional and intra-regional
|
688 |
-
disparities in infrastructural development
|
689 |
-
and access to services
|
690 |
-
Challenges
|
691 |
-
8. Nationally, regionally and locally balanced and competitive development
|
692 |
-
1. Ensure that the investment flow and
|
693 |
-
infrastructural development plans fairly go hand in
|
694 |
-
hand with resource potential and development
|
695 |
-
needs
|
696 |
-
?Developing underutilized natural resources
|
697 |
-
?Equitable distribution and access to
|
698 |
-
infrastructure
|
699 |
-
?Sustainable environmental protection
|
700 |
-
2. Ensure the inclusion of pastoral and agro-pastoral
|
701 |
-
areas in the development
|
702 |
-
?Focused infrastructural development in pastoral
|
703 |
-
areas such as education and health sector input
|
704 |
-
provision as well as governance
|
705 |
-
?Market linkages with other areas and the central
|
706 |
-
markets
|
707 |
-
?Improve rural finance (credit and insurance) to
|
708 |
-
encourage fattening, milk processing, leather
|
709 |
-
production and irrigation agriculture
|
710 |
-
Focus areas
|
711 |
-
9. Monitoring and Evaluation
|
712 |
-
10 Years Perspective
|
713 |
-
Plan KPIs
|
714 |
-
Federal Implementing
|
715 |
-
Institutions
|
716 |
-
Planning and
|
717 |
-
Development Commission
|
718 |
-
Generate Data (Census,
|
719 |
-
Sample and administrative
|
720 |
-
data)
|
721 |
-
Annual Reports
|
722 |
-
Dialogue forums
|
723 |
-
(Civic Organizations, professional
|
724 |
-
associations, development partners,
|
725 |
-
intellectuals)
|
726 |
-
Central Statistical Agency
|
727 |
-
Database
|
728 |
-
National
|
729 |
-
Information Portal
|
730 |
-
National Statistics
|
731 |
-
Development Strategic
|
732 |
-
plan
|
733 |
-
Evaluation Reports
|
734 |
-
Prime Minister�s Office
|
735 |
-
House of People�s
|
736 |
-
Representatives
|
737 |
Thank you!
|
|
|
1 |
+
Ethiopia 2030: The Pathway to Prosperity
|
2 |
+
Ten Years Perspective Development Plan (2021 � 2030)
|
3 |
+
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
4 |
+
2. Strategic pillars
|
5 |
+
3. Departures
|
6 |
+
4. Macroeconomic goals
|
7 |
+
5. Implications of the COVID-19 pandemic and necessary mitigation measures
|
8 |
+
6. Potentials/capabilities
|
9 |
+
7. Focus areas
|
10 |
+
7.1. Productive sectors
|
11 |
+
7.2. Services sector
|
12 |
+
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
13 |
+
8. Balanced and competitive development (nationally, regionally and locally)
|
14 |
+
9. Monitoring and Evaluation
|
15 |
+
Content
|
16 |
+
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
17 |
+
Poverty Reduction (%)
|
18 |
+
Key performances of previous years
|
19 |
+
45.5 44.2
|
20 |
+
38.7
|
21 |
+
29.6
|
22 |
+
23.5
|
23 |
+
19
|
24 |
+
0
|
25 |
+
5
|
26 |
+
10
|
27 |
+
15
|
28 |
+
20
|
29 |
+
25
|
30 |
+
30
|
31 |
+
35
|
32 |
+
40
|
33 |
+
45
|
34 |
+
50
|
35 |
+
1994 2000 2005 2011 2016 2020
|
36 |
+
Percent
|
37 |
+
Year
|
38 |
+
Proportion of people living below poverty line
|
39 |
+
10.5
|
40 |
+
8.8
|
41 |
+
10.1
|
42 |
+
7.7
|
43 |
+
9
|
44 |
+
5.19-6.20
|
45 |
+
0 2 4 6 8 10 12
|
46 |
+
GTP I: 2011-2015
|
47 |
+
GTP II: 2015/16
|
48 |
+
GTP II: 2016/17
|
49 |
+
GTP II: 2017/18
|
50 |
+
GTP II: 2018/19
|
51 |
+
GTP II: 2019/20 (projection, with
|
52 |
+
COVID-19)
|
53 |
+
GDP growth rate (%)
|
54 |
+
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
55 |
+
Share of economic sectors in GDP (%) Merchandise export as % of GDP
|
56 |
+
8.66
|
57 |
+
7.33
|
58 |
+
6.57
|
59 |
+
5.93
|
60 |
+
4.91
|
61 |
+
3.86 3.56 3.37
|
62 |
+
2.77
|
63 |
+
0
|
64 |
+
1
|
65 |
+
2
|
66 |
+
3
|
67 |
+
4
|
68 |
+
5
|
69 |
+
6
|
70 |
+
7
|
71 |
+
8
|
72 |
+
9
|
73 |
+
10
|
74 |
+
Percent
|
75 |
+
Year
|
76 |
+
46.9
|
77 |
+
45
|
78 |
+
43.5
|
79 |
+
41.4
|
80 |
+
39.5
|
81 |
+
37.1 35.9
|
82 |
+
34.5
|
83 |
+
32.8
|
84 |
+
13.4
|
85 |
+
15
|
86 |
+
17.3
|
87 |
+
18.8
|
88 |
+
21
|
89 |
+
23.5
|
90 |
+
25.7 26.9 27.8
|
91 |
+
4.7 4.8 5 5.3 5.6 6.1 6.9 6.8 6.8
|
92 |
+
7.1
|
93 |
+
8.6
|
94 |
+
10.7 12
|
95 |
+
14.2
|
96 |
+
16.2
|
97 |
+
17.8 19.1 20.1
|
98 |
+
39.8 40.1 39.2 39.8 39.4 38.4 38.6 39.4
|
99 |
+
0
|
100 |
+
5
|
101 |
+
10
|
102 |
+
15
|
103 |
+
20
|
104 |
+
25
|
105 |
+
30
|
106 |
+
35
|
107 |
+
40
|
108 |
+
45
|
109 |
+
50
|
110 |
+
2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 2014/15 2015/16 2016/17 2017/18 2018/19
|
111 |
+
Percent
|
112 |
+
Agriculture Industry Manufacturing Construction Services
|
113 |
+
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
114 |
+
Labour force participation (2013)
|
115 |
+
73%
|
116 |
+
7%
|
117 |
+
20%
|
118 |
+
Agriculture
|
119 |
+
Industry
|
120 |
+
Services
|
121 |
+
7%
|
122 |
+
22%
|
123 |
+
71%
|
124 |
+
Agriculture
|
125 |
+
Industry
|
126 |
+
Services
|
127 |
+
Urban labour force participation (2013)
|
128 |
+
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
129 |
+
High and increasing Unemployment Rate
|
130 |
+
� Urban unemployment rate = 19.1% in 2018
|
131 |
+
� Youth unemployment rate = 25.3 %
|
132 |
+
? Male = 18.6%
|
133 |
+
? Female 30.9 %
|
134 |
+
� Rural unemployment rate = 2% in 2013
|
135 |
+
� Declining per capita rural land creating
|
136 |
+
disguised unemployment
|
137 |
+
402,869
|
138 |
+
471,535
|
139 |
+
Male Female Total Male Female Total
|
140 |
+
2014 2018
|
141 |
+
15-19 yr. 20-24 yr. 25-29 yr. Linear (20-24 yr.)
|
142 |
+
Number of unemployed people in urban areas
|
143 |
+
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
144 |
+
Challenges
|
145 |
+
1. Macroeconomic imbalances
|
146 |
+
?Sustained high inflation
|
147 |
+
?High and rising unemployment especially
|
148 |
+
in urban areas
|
149 |
+
?High and rising debt burden
|
150 |
+
?Chronic foreign currency shortage
|
151 |
+
?Sluggish (though encouraging) rate of
|
152 |
+
structural change
|
153 |
+
2. Vulnerability to shocks (COVID-19, Climate
|
154 |
+
changes, Desert Locust infestation, etc)
|
155 |
+
3. Poor quality and high inequity in
|
156 |
+
infrastructure projects
|
157 |
+
4. Poor quality services in health and
|
158 |
+
education
|
159 |
+
� High repetition and dropout rates from school
|
160 |
+
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
161 |
+
� Poor quality of growth and slow
|
162 |
+
structural change
|
163 |
+
� Excessive aid and loan
|
164 |
+
dependence for financing
|
165 |
+
infrastructural and construction
|
166 |
+
investments
|
167 |
+
� Limited success in expanding
|
168 |
+
manufacturing and modern
|
169 |
+
agriculture which have high job
|
170 |
+
creation potentials
|
171 |
+
� Weak institutional capacity as
|
172 |
+
the main culprit of all failures
|
173 |
+
? Provision of quality services
|
174 |
+
(electricity, water, telephone,
|
175 |
+
internet)
|
176 |
+
? Creation of enough jobs and
|
177 |
+
improved living standards
|
178 |
+
? Generation of reliable foreign
|
179 |
+
exchange revenue and debtsustainable
|
180 |
+
national economic
|
181 |
+
capacity
|
182 |
+
? Completion of development
|
183 |
+
projects and investment plans
|
184 |
+
under public-private
|
185 |
+
partnerships
|
186 |
+
� Low reward for merit, productivity and effort
|
187 |
+
while low disincentive for laziness, wastefulness
|
188 |
+
and corruption
|
189 |
+
� Slow institutional change and transformation in:
|
190 |
+
? Government policies
|
191 |
+
? Investor attitude
|
192 |
+
? Youth behaviour
|
193 |
+
? Role of the intellectuals
|
194 |
+
� The need for sustained increase in production
|
195 |
+
and productivity
|
196 |
+
� The need to set a common national vision to
|
197 |
+
achieve major successes with consensus and
|
198 |
+
popular legitimacy
|
199 |
+
Major areas of failure in the economy
|
200 |
+
1. Baselines and Assumptions
|
201 |
+
� Poor quality of growth and slow
|
202 |
+
structural change
|
203 |
+
� Excessive aid and loan
|
204 |
+
dependence for financing
|
205 |
+
infrastructural and construction
|
206 |
+
investments
|
207 |
+
� Limited success in expanding
|
208 |
+
manufacturing and modern
|
209 |
+
agriculture which have high job
|
210 |
+
creation potentials
|
211 |
+
� Weak institutional capacity as
|
212 |
+
the main culprit of all failures
|
213 |
+
? Provision of quality services
|
214 |
+
(electricity, water, telephone,
|
215 |
+
internet)
|
216 |
+
? Creation of enough jobs and
|
217 |
+
improved living standards
|
218 |
+
? Generation of reliable foreign
|
219 |
+
exchange revenue and debtsustainable
|
220 |
+
national economic
|
221 |
+
capacity
|
222 |
+
? Completion of development
|
223 |
+
projects and investment plans
|
224 |
+
under public-private
|
225 |
+
partnerships
|
226 |
+
� Low reward for merit, productivity and effort
|
227 |
+
while low disincentive for laziness, wastefulness
|
228 |
+
and corruption
|
229 |
+
� Slow institutional change and transformation in:
|
230 |
+
? Government policies
|
231 |
+
? Investor attitude
|
232 |
+
? Youth behaviour
|
233 |
+
? Role of the intellectuals
|
234 |
+
� The need for sustained increase in production
|
235 |
+
and productivity
|
236 |
+
� The need to set a common national vision to
|
237 |
+
achieve major successes with consensus and
|
238 |
+
popular legitimacy
|
239 |
+
Major areas of failure in the economy
|
240 |
+
2. Departures
|
241 |
+
1. Emphasis on quality of economic growth
|
242 |
+
2. Participation and coordination of sectors in the planning process
|
243 |
+
3. Sectoral linkages and multi-sectoral development focus
|
244 |
+
4. Preparation of national development corridors based on development potentials
|
245 |
+
5. Focus on solving institutional bottlenecks
|
246 |
+
6. The ongoing home grown economic reform programme as a sprinting board
|
247 |
+
7. Emphasis on resilience building, innovation and entrepreneurship
|
248 |
+
3. Strategic pillars
|
249 |
+
1. Ensure quality growth
|
250 |
+
2. Improve productivity and competitiveness
|
251 |
+
3. Undertake institutional transformation
|
252 |
+
4. Ensure private sector's leadership in the economy
|
253 |
+
5. Ensure equitable participation of women and children
|
254 |
+
6. Build climate resilient green economy
|
255 |
+
3. Strategic pillars
|
256 |
+
� Increasing export revenues and substituting imports by
|
257 |
+
reducing production costs
|
258 |
+
� Availing quality and massive infrastructure
|
259 |
+
? Linking infrastructural development with development corridors
|
260 |
+
� Producing required human resources with quality
|
261 |
+
� Producing enough and quality human resources
|
262 |
+
� Prioritizing innovative production systems
|
263 |
+
� Linking incentives with export revenue and job creation
|
264 |
+
performances
|
265 |
+
� Modernizing and enhancing the logistic system
|
266 |
+
� Creating technological competences needed for longterm
|
267 |
+
growth
|
268 |
+
� The economic growth should ensure:
|
269 |
+
? Participation of all citizens and equitable utilization of the
|
270 |
+
growth proceeds
|
271 |
+
? Improved standard of living of every citizen
|
272 |
+
? Reduced poverty in all indicators
|
273 |
+
? Reduced inflation and unemployment
|
274 |
+
� The economic growth should lead to increased
|
275 |
+
aggregate supply
|
276 |
+
� Focus on modern agriculture, manufacturing and
|
277 |
+
mining
|
278 |
+
� Emphasis on exploiting the sources of growth through
|
279 |
+
structural change
|
280 |
+
1.Ensuring quality economic growth 2. Raising production and productivity
|
281 |
+
3. Strategic pillars
|
282 |
+
� Build democratic and judicial institutions that ensure elite bargain,
|
283 |
+
national consensus, common vision and government legitimacy
|
284 |
+
� Build private sector and competition friendly bureaucracy
|
285 |
+
� Coordinate with parents, the society and teachers to make
|
286 |
+
educational institutions centers of excellence and virtuous citizens
|
287 |
+
� Coordinate with parents as well as social and religious leaders to
|
288 |
+
encourage religious institutions and their teachings contribute
|
289 |
+
towards poverty reduction efforts
|
290 |
+
� Prepare policies, strategies and legal frameworks for achieving
|
291 |
+
prosperity
|
292 |
+
� Increased focus on innovation and research
|
293 |
+
� Creating strong social security system
|
294 |
+
3. Institutional Transformation 4. Private sector's leadership in the economy
|
295 |
+
� Create conducive investment climate and incentivize
|
296 |
+
domestic investors in key sectors
|
297 |
+
� Build strong and market-led public-private partnerships in
|
298 |
+
order to ensure the establishment of inclusive and
|
299 |
+
pragmatic market economy
|
300 |
+
� Enhance access and quality of infrastructure to attract
|
301 |
+
quality foreign direct investment
|
302 |
+
� Identify new sources of growth, empower and stimulate
|
303 |
+
the private sector, and supplement the private sector in
|
304 |
+
strategic areas
|
305 |
+
� Emphasis for public-private partnership on problem
|
306 |
+
solving innovations and research activities
|
307 |
+
3. Strategic pillars
|
308 |
+
� Ensure gender equity in economic and social
|
309 |
+
sectors
|
310 |
+
? Participation of women at all levels of education
|
311 |
+
? Asset ownership of women
|
312 |
+
� Ensure fair participation of women and youth in
|
313 |
+
leadership and decision making positions
|
314 |
+
� Create awareness among citizens about the role of
|
315 |
+
women and youth in the country�s overall
|
316 |
+
development
|
317 |
+
� Increase basin development efforts to fight land
|
318 |
+
degradation and to reduce pollutions
|
319 |
+
� Improve productivity and reduce GHG emissions
|
320 |
+
� Increase forest protection and development
|
321 |
+
� Increase production of electricity from renewable
|
322 |
+
sources for domestic use and for export
|
323 |
+
� Focus on modern and energy saving technologies
|
324 |
+
5. Equitable participation of women and children 6. Climate resilient green economy
|
325 |
+
4. Macroeconomic Goals
|
326 |
+
Assumptions
|
327 |
+
? Requirement to significantly reduce
|
328 |
+
poverty
|
329 |
+
? Available national potentials
|
330 |
+
? Potential for investment in the economy
|
331 |
+
? Existing potentials in each sector
|
332 |
+
? Low productivity that needs to be
|
333 |
+
improved
|
334 |
+
� Make Ethiopia a middle income
|
335 |
+
economy by 2022
|
336 |
+
� Raise per capita income to USD 1,115
|
337 |
+
in 2022
|
338 |
+
? Threshold for middle-income is USD 1,026
|
339 |
+
? Plus human development index and
|
340 |
+
economic vulnerability index
|
341 |
+
� Raise per capita income to USD 2,220
|
342 |
+
by 2030
|
343 |
+
Sectoral growth Targets (2021-2030)
|
344 |
+
Assured middle- income potential
|
345 |
+
10.2%
|
346 |
+
Average
|
347 |
+
Growth
|
348 |
+
Target
|
349 |
+
Percentage of population below poverty line
|
350 |
+
4. Macroeconomic Goals
|
351 |
+
Structural change
|
352 |
+
Financing Gaps
|
353 |
+
Reduce urban unemployment to less than 9%
|
354 |
+
?1.36 million new jobs need to be
|
355 |
+
created per annum
|
356 |
+
Sectoral composition of GDP Labour force participation
|
357 |
+
Economic
|
358 |
+
Sectors
|
359 |
+
Performance Target
|
360 |
+
2011 2015 2018/19 2030
|
361 |
+
Agriculture 45 39.7 32.8 22.0
|
362 |
+
Industry 15.1 21.2 27.6 35.9
|
363 |
+
Manufacturing 4.7 5.5 6.8 17.2
|
364 |
+
Services 39.9 39 39.4 42.1
|
365 |
+
5. Implications of the COVID-19 pandemic and necessary mitigation measures
|
366 |
+
� GDP growth for 2019/20 fiscal year is projected to be lower than its target of 9.0% by between 2.81
|
367 |
+
and 3.80 percentage points (equivalent to 58.3 - 78.8 billion birr) due to COVID-19 pandemic
|
368 |
+
� If the current scenario continues, next year�s GDP growth could decline by 2.8 percentage points
|
369 |
+
� Returning the economy to its high growth trajectory requires focusing on sectors with high
|
370 |
+
productivity and job creation potentials
|
371 |
+
� Public investment should focus on empowering the private sector
|
372 |
+
� Promoting both domestic and foreign investments with the right set of incentives (merit based)
|
373 |
+
� Modernizing production systems and improving uptake of technology
|
374 |
+
� Conducting demand analysis for export commodities to remedy for the declining trend in exports
|
375 |
+
and foreign exchange earnings.
|
376 |
+
6. Potentials
|
377 |
+
� Endowment of various natural resources contributing to the growth potential
|
378 |
+
� Huge unutilized arable land creates great potential for the success of the plan
|
379 |
+
� Endowment of gemstones, ornamental, energy, metals, and metallic minerals
|
380 |
+
� Gold, coal, iron ore, potash, tantalum, marble, petroleum and other natural resources
|
381 |
+
Natural
|
382 |
+
Resources
|
383 |
+
� Large youth population and potential for demographic dividend
|
384 |
+
� Cumulative capacity in education and health
|
385 |
+
� Positive attitude and noble culture of reaching agreement among citizens
|
386 |
+
Human
|
387 |
+
capital
|
388 |
+
6. Potentials
|
389 |
+
Built physical and material capitals
|
390 |
+
?Transport and communication
|
391 |
+
? Irrigation infrastructures for modern agriculture
|
392 |
+
?Industrial Parks
|
393 |
+
?Mega energy infrastructures
|
394 |
+
Physical
|
395 |
+
capital
|
396 |
+
Unexploited
|
397 |
+
growth
|
398 |
+
potentials
|
399 |
+
� Utilizing the tourism potential through modernization
|
400 |
+
� Using the mining subsector as a source of input as well as a competitive industry in its
|
401 |
+
own right
|
402 |
+
6. Potentials
|
403 |
+
� Solving supply side bottlenecks to satisfy the existing demand
|
404 |
+
� Improving international acceptance and reliable partnerships
|
405 |
+
? The �medemer�/synergy philosophy
|
406 |
+
? The ongoing political reform measures
|
407 |
+
? The Homegrown Economic Reform programme
|
408 |
+
� Increased finance from partners and multilateral institutions
|
409 |
+
? Increased availability of foreign exchange
|
410 |
+
? Reduced debt stress for the short to medium term
|
411 |
+
? Increased potential for development
|
412 |
+
Increased
|
413 |
+
demand as
|
414 |
+
potential
|
415 |
+
Political Capital
|
416 |
+
Continental
|
417 |
+
and regional
|
418 |
+
integrations
|
419 |
+
� Regional and continental economic integration agreements
|
420 |
+
� International and continental free trade agreements
|
421 |
+
6. Potentials
|
422 |
+
Low
|
423 |
+
technology as
|
424 |
+
a potential
|
425 |
+
� Undeniably low status of technological development
|
426 |
+
� International mobility and spillover effect of technology
|
427 |
+
� Potential for development and catching up by filling the technological gaps
|
428 |
+
� Doubling crop productivity from the current 24-36 quintals per hectare will result
|
429 |
+
in 7% increase in crop production
|
430 |
+
� Raise the production efficiency of manufacturing from the current 50% to 80%
|
431 |
+
7. Focus Areas
|
432 |
+
7.1. Productive sectors: agriculture, manufacturing, mining
|
433 |
+
7.2. Service sector: tourism
|
434 |
+
7.3. Enabling sectors: energy, transport, sustainable finance,
|
435 |
+
innovation and technology, urban development, irrigation,
|
436 |
+
human capital development
|
437 |
+
7.1. Productive sectors
|
438 |
+
Agriculture Objectives
|
439 |
+
1. Free agriculture from rain dependence
|
440 |
+
2. Agricultural mechanization services
|
441 |
+
3. Contract farming, cluster approach and
|
442 |
+
land consolidation
|
443 |
+
4. Livestock, animal feed and animal health
|
444 |
+
5. Horticulture (irrigation and urban farming)
|
445 |
+
6. Private sector participation
|
446 |
+
7. Institutional implementation capacity
|
447 |
+
8. Climate resilient sustainable agricultural
|
448 |
+
development
|
449 |
+
1. Improve income and livelihood options for farming and pastoral
|
450 |
+
communities through increased productivity and competitiveness
|
451 |
+
2. Modernize agriculture and ensure national food and nutrition security
|
452 |
+
3. Raise export of agricultural output and substitute imports
|
453 |
+
4. Make agriculture a viable and profitable enterprise through value addition
|
454 |
+
5. Create rural employment opportunities
|
455 |
+
6. Enhance livestock health access and quality
|
456 |
+
7. Preserve animal genetic resources and increase pastoral research
|
457 |
+
8. Improve the development of animal feed and access to markets
|
458 |
+
9. Develop livestock specific extension package for each livestock type
|
459 |
+
Focus Areas
|
460 |
+
7.1. Productive sector
|
461 |
+
Manufacturing Industry
|
462 |
+
Objectives
|
463 |
+
1. Production of quality and competitive food, textile, housing and
|
464 |
+
pharmaceutical products for export and domestic markets
|
465 |
+
2. Production and productivity of existing manufacturing industries
|
466 |
+
3. Utilization of locally available inputs
|
467 |
+
4. Value chains, linkages and interdependencies
|
468 |
+
5. Linkages between large scale metallurgical and engineering,
|
469 |
+
chemical and pharmaceutical industries with other industries
|
470 |
+
6. Job creation, cluster approaches and expanding small and medium
|
471 |
+
scale manufacturing
|
472 |
+
7. Private sector participation and partnership
|
473 |
+
1. Establish basis for domestic industrialization
|
474 |
+
2. Value addition through enhanced inter-sectoral
|
475 |
+
linkages
|
476 |
+
3. Enhance productivity through private sector
|
477 |
+
leadership and supportive role of the
|
478 |
+
government
|
479 |
+
? Create job opportunities for the youth leaving
|
480 |
+
agriculture and concentrating in urban areas
|
481 |
+
? Make exportable commodities internationally
|
482 |
+
competitive
|
483 |
+
? Ensure structural change
|
484 |
+
Focus areas
|
485 |
+
7.1. Productive sectors
|
486 |
+
Mining
|
487 |
+
Objectives
|
488 |
+
� Foreign exchange earning and
|
489 |
+
domestic revenues
|
490 |
+
� Increased investment in mining
|
491 |
+
� Participation of manufacturing
|
492 |
+
industries that add value
|
493 |
+
� Job creation
|
494 |
+
� Add value for improved contribution of the subsector
|
495 |
+
� Increase inter-sectoral linkages to raise raw material inputs to other
|
496 |
+
sectors
|
497 |
+
� Make mining a competent subsector and induce structural change
|
498 |
+
� Increase human resource and technological capabilities through
|
499 |
+
research and trainings
|
500 |
+
� Raise foreign exchange revenue from mining through increased
|
501 |
+
exploration and production
|
502 |
+
� Improve traditional mining production and marketing systems
|
503 |
+
� Improve the country�s geological information
|
504 |
+
Focus areas
|
505 |
+
7.2. Service sector
|
506 |
+
Tourism
|
507 |
+
Objectives
|
508 |
+
� Identification and developing destinations
|
509 |
+
� Infrastructure
|
510 |
+
� Competitiveness
|
511 |
+
?improve existing destinations
|
512 |
+
?develop new destinations
|
513 |
+
? diversify service and raise quality
|
514 |
+
� Market linkages, branding, and promotion
|
515 |
+
� Technology, research and development
|
516 |
+
� Preservation, maintenance and proper
|
517 |
+
utilization of heritage resources
|
518 |
+
� Expand job opportunities
|
519 |
+
� Raise incomes
|
520 |
+
� Build information management
|
521 |
+
systems
|
522 |
+
� Increase implementation capacity
|
523 |
+
Focus areas
|
524 |
+
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
525 |
+
Urban development
|
526 |
+
Objectives
|
527 |
+
? Prioritize productive sectors in job creation and enterprise
|
528 |
+
development plans
|
529 |
+
? Rapid development and equity goals in land provision system
|
530 |
+
? Participation of indigenous people in land redevelopment and
|
531 |
+
expansion
|
532 |
+
? Urban land registration and cadaster system, modern
|
533 |
+
property valuation
|
534 |
+
? Greenery and public spaces as well as waste disposal and
|
535 |
+
management in urban planning and implementation
|
536 |
+
? Housing development and financing options to reduce
|
537 |
+
housing shortages
|
538 |
+
? Integrated infrastructure and services provision
|
539 |
+
? Role of private sector in infrastructure development and
|
540 |
+
service provision
|
541 |
+
� Expand micro and small-scale
|
542 |
+
enterprises to reduce urban
|
543 |
+
unemployment
|
544 |
+
� Develop and avail urban land based on
|
545 |
+
demand, equity and cost effectiveness
|
546 |
+
� Make quality housing accessible both in
|
547 |
+
rural and urban areas
|
548 |
+
� Develop quality and integrated
|
549 |
+
infrastructure as well as service
|
550 |
+
provision in towns
|
551 |
+
� Improve financial management and
|
552 |
+
resource utilization in urban areas
|
553 |
+
Focus areas
|
554 |
+
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
555 |
+
Innovation and Technology
|
556 |
+
Objectives
|
557 |
+
? Access to innovation and
|
558 |
+
technological information
|
559 |
+
? Developing a digital economy
|
560 |
+
? Productivity enhancement and
|
561 |
+
competitiveness
|
562 |
+
? Build a digital economy
|
563 |
+
? Develop national scientific research and technological
|
564 |
+
capabilities
|
565 |
+
? Support problem solving research and development of
|
566 |
+
technologies necessary for raising production,
|
567 |
+
productivity and service provision
|
568 |
+
? Create jobs and capital that are based on technology
|
569 |
+
? Develop technological and data security protection
|
570 |
+
systems
|
571 |
+
Focus areas
|
572 |
+
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
573 |
+
Sustainable finance
|
574 |
+
Objectives
|
575 |
+
� Access to modern finance and saving culture in rural
|
576 |
+
areas
|
577 |
+
� Support to the private sector and corporations to
|
578 |
+
reinvest profits in productive sectors
|
579 |
+
� Role of private financial institutions in manufacturing
|
580 |
+
and agriculture
|
581 |
+
� Digital revenue collection system
|
582 |
+
� Tax equity (contraband, tax evasion, and bringing the
|
583 |
+
underground economy to the tax system)
|
584 |
+
� Domestic and foreign strategic partnerships
|
585 |
+
� Transform financing from short term to long-term,
|
586 |
+
sustainable and quality sources
|
587 |
+
� Ensure financing quality based on sectoral prioritization
|
588 |
+
and reduction of wastage
|
589 |
+
� Increase the number of domestic saving institutions both
|
590 |
+
in rural and urban areas
|
591 |
+
� Support domestic finance with foreign exchange capacity
|
592 |
+
and foreign direct investment
|
593 |
+
� Modernize domestic revenue collection system
|
594 |
+
� Raise voluntary tax payment attitude
|
595 |
+
� Bring the informal sector to the formal tax system
|
596 |
+
Focus areas
|
597 |
+
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
598 |
+
Transport
|
599 |
+
Objectives
|
600 |
+
� Access to infrastructure
|
601 |
+
� Implementation capacity
|
602 |
+
� Participation of the private sector and the general
|
603 |
+
public
|
604 |
+
� Financing capacity
|
605 |
+
� Ensure equitable access to transport infrastructure and
|
606 |
+
services
|
607 |
+
� Improve transport safety
|
608 |
+
� Make logistics services fast and reliable
|
609 |
+
� Build transport infrastructure and service that is
|
610 |
+
resilient to climate change
|
611 |
+
Focus areas
|
612 |
+
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
613 |
+
Energy
|
614 |
+
Objectives
|
615 |
+
? Equity in access to electricity services
|
616 |
+
? Energy access and quality
|
617 |
+
? Alternative sources of energy
|
618 |
+
? Reliability of electricity infrastructure
|
619 |
+
? Investment and income in energy subsector
|
620 |
+
� Ensure equitable access to transport
|
621 |
+
infrastructure and services
|
622 |
+
� Improve transport safety
|
623 |
+
� Make logistics services fast and reliable
|
624 |
+
� Build transport infrastructure and service that is
|
625 |
+
resilient to climate change
|
626 |
+
Focus areas
|
627 |
+
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
628 |
+
Irrigation
|
629 |
+
Objectives
|
630 |
+
? Medium and large scale irrigation infrastructure
|
631 |
+
? Job creation
|
632 |
+
? Share of government expenditure and alternative
|
633 |
+
financing options
|
634 |
+
? Institutional capacity and human resource
|
635 |
+
development
|
636 |
+
? Improve agricultural output and productivity
|
637 |
+
? Reduce government spending and enhance
|
638 |
+
institutional capacity and human resources
|
639 |
+
development
|
640 |
+
? Ensure the inclusion of all genders and
|
641 |
+
disabled citizens
|
642 |
+
? Develop alternative financing options for
|
643 |
+
irrigation development
|
644 |
+
Focus areas
|
645 |
+
7.3. Enabling sectors
|
646 |
+
Human capital development
|
647 |
+
Objectives
|
648 |
+
� Make education and training inclusive and equitable by
|
649 |
+
harmonizing the system with ability, need and capacity
|
650 |
+
� Develop capacity of educational institutions (teacher capacity,
|
651 |
+
inputs and technology)
|
652 |
+
� Establish education and training quality assurance system
|
653 |
+
� Avail free and compulsory education for pre-primary to junior
|
654 |
+
secondary levels and free education at the senior secondary levels
|
655 |
+
equitably
|
656 |
+
� Ensure the relevance of education and training system and
|
657 |
+
synchronize education policy with economic and social
|
658 |
+
development needs
|
659 |
+
� Make the education and training policy compatible with the
|
660 |
+
nation�s contemporary capacities as well as global and regional
|
661 |
+
market opportunities
|
662 |
+
� Enhance commitment, capability and responsibility of citizens
|
663 |
+
? Ensure equitable and quality health services
|
664 |
+
? Raise average life expectancy
|
665 |
+
? Achieve universal health coverage through
|
666 |
+
proactive and prevention health system
|
667 |
+
? Curtail preventable maternal and child deaths
|
668 |
+
? Reduce incidences of contagious and noncontagious
|
669 |
+
related diseases and deaths
|
670 |
+
? Build capacity for health tourism through
|
671 |
+
increased treatment capabilities
|
672 |
+
? Create a healthy society that is free from
|
673 |
+
addictions and use technology for supporting
|
674 |
+
knowledge led economic development
|
675 |
+
Focus areas
|
676 |
+
8 Nationally, regionally and locally balanced and competitive development
|
677 |
+
1. Lack of synchronization of investment with
|
678 |
+
resource potentials and development needs
|
679 |
+
2. Poor alignment of federal, regional and
|
680 |
+
district level investment plans with the
|
681 |
+
national development goals and envisioned
|
682 |
+
settlement patterns
|
683 |
+
3. Poor regional coordination due to low
|
684 |
+
consideration for trans-regional and
|
685 |
+
spatial issues in development plans of
|
686 |
+
regional states
|
687 |
+
4. Inter-regional and intra-regional
|
688 |
+
disparities in infrastructural development
|
689 |
+
and access to services
|
690 |
+
Challenges
|
691 |
+
8. Nationally, regionally and locally balanced and competitive development
|
692 |
+
1. Ensure that the investment flow and
|
693 |
+
infrastructural development plans fairly go hand in
|
694 |
+
hand with resource potential and development
|
695 |
+
needs
|
696 |
+
?Developing underutilized natural resources
|
697 |
+
?Equitable distribution and access to
|
698 |
+
infrastructure
|
699 |
+
?Sustainable environmental protection
|
700 |
+
2. Ensure the inclusion of pastoral and agro-pastoral
|
701 |
+
areas in the development
|
702 |
+
?Focused infrastructural development in pastoral
|
703 |
+
areas such as education and health sector input
|
704 |
+
provision as well as governance
|
705 |
+
?Market linkages with other areas and the central
|
706 |
+
markets
|
707 |
+
?Improve rural finance (credit and insurance) to
|
708 |
+
encourage fattening, milk processing, leather
|
709 |
+
production and irrigation agriculture
|
710 |
+
Focus areas
|
711 |
+
9. Monitoring and Evaluation
|
712 |
+
10 Years Perspective
|
713 |
+
Plan KPIs
|
714 |
+
Federal Implementing
|
715 |
+
Institutions
|
716 |
+
Planning and
|
717 |
+
Development Commission
|
718 |
+
Generate Data (Census,
|
719 |
+
Sample and administrative
|
720 |
+
data)
|
721 |
+
Annual Reports
|
722 |
+
Dialogue forums
|
723 |
+
(Civic Organizations, professional
|
724 |
+
associations, development partners,
|
725 |
+
intellectuals)
|
726 |
+
Central Statistical Agency
|
727 |
+
Database
|
728 |
+
National
|
729 |
+
Information Portal
|
730 |
+
National Statistics
|
731 |
+
Development Strategic
|
732 |
+
plan
|
733 |
+
Evaluation Reports
|
734 |
+
Prime Minister�s Office
|
735 |
+
House of People�s
|
736 |
+
Representatives
|
737 |
Thank you!
|
{sample → docStore/sample}/South Africa_s Low Emission Development Strategy.txt
RENAMED
File without changes
|
{sample → docStore/sample}/keywordexample.json
RENAMED
File without changes
|
udfPreprocess/paramconfig.cfg → paramconfig.cfg
RENAMED
File without changes
|
{udfPreprocess → utils}/__init__.py
RENAMED
File without changes
|
{udfPreprocess → utils}/preprocessing.py
RENAMED
@@ -11,14 +11,13 @@ import string
|
|
11 |
from haystack.pipelines import Pipeline
|
12 |
import configparser
|
13 |
config = configparser.ConfigParser()
|
14 |
-
config.read_file(open('
|
15 |
top_k = int(config.get('lexical_search','TOP_K'))
|
16 |
|
17 |
def useOCR(file_path: str)-> Text:
|
18 |
"""
|
19 |
Converts image pdfs into text, Using the Farm-haystack[OCR]
|
20 |
-
|
21 |
-
|
22 |
Params
|
23 |
----------
|
24 |
file_path: file_path of uploade file, returned by add_upload function in
|
|
|
11 |
from haystack.pipelines import Pipeline
|
12 |
import configparser
|
13 |
config = configparser.ConfigParser()
|
14 |
+
config.read_file(open('paramconfig.cfg'))
|
15 |
top_k = int(config.get('lexical_search','TOP_K'))
|
16 |
|
17 |
def useOCR(file_path: str)-> Text:
|
18 |
"""
|
19 |
Converts image pdfs into text, Using the Farm-haystack[OCR]
|
20 |
+
|
|
|
21 |
Params
|
22 |
----------
|
23 |
file_path: file_path of uploade file, returned by add_upload function in
|
{udfPreprocess → utils}/sdg_classifier.py
RENAMED
@@ -5,9 +5,9 @@ import configparser
|
|
5 |
import streamlit as st
|
6 |
from pandas import DataFrame, Series
|
7 |
import logging
|
8 |
-
from
|
9 |
config = configparser.ConfigParser()
|
10 |
-
config.read_file(open('
|
11 |
|
12 |
@st.cache(allow_output_mutation=True)
|
13 |
def load_sdgClassifier():
|
@@ -58,13 +58,11 @@ def sdg_classification(haystackdoc:List[Document])->Tuple[DataFrame,Series]:
|
|
58 |
l.meta['classification']['score'],l.content,) for l in results]
|
59 |
|
60 |
df = DataFrame(labels_, columns=["SDG","Relevancy","text"])
|
61 |
-
|
62 |
-
# df['text'] = paraList
|
63 |
df = df.sort_values(by="Relevancy", ascending=False).reset_index(drop=True)
|
64 |
df.index += 1
|
65 |
df =df[df['Relevancy']>threshold]
|
66 |
x = df['SDG'].value_counts()
|
67 |
-
# df = df.copy()
|
68 |
df= df.drop(['Relevancy'], axis = 1)
|
69 |
|
70 |
|
|
|
5 |
import streamlit as st
|
6 |
from pandas import DataFrame, Series
|
7 |
import logging
|
8 |
+
from utils.preprocessing import processingpipeline
|
9 |
config = configparser.ConfigParser()
|
10 |
+
config.read_file(open('paramconfig.cfg'))
|
11 |
|
12 |
@st.cache(allow_output_mutation=True)
|
13 |
def load_sdgClassifier():
|
|
|
58 |
l.meta['classification']['score'],l.content,) for l in results]
|
59 |
|
60 |
df = DataFrame(labels_, columns=["SDG","Relevancy","text"])
|
61 |
+
|
|
|
62 |
df = df.sort_values(by="Relevancy", ascending=False).reset_index(drop=True)
|
63 |
df.index += 1
|
64 |
df =df[df['Relevancy']>threshold]
|
65 |
x = df['SDG'].value_counts()
|
|
|
66 |
df= df.drop(['Relevancy'], axis = 1)
|
67 |
|
68 |
|
{udfPreprocess → utils}/search.py
RENAMED
File without changes
|
{udfPreprocess → utils}/uploadAndExample.py
RENAMED
@@ -31,10 +31,10 @@ def add_upload(choice):
|
|
31 |
('South Africa:Low Emission strategy',
|
32 |
'Ethiopia: 10 Year Development Plan'))
|
33 |
if option is 'South Africa:Low Emission strategy':
|
34 |
-
file_name = file_path = 'sample/South Africa_s Low Emission Development Strategy.txt'
|
35 |
st.session_state['filename'] = file_name
|
36 |
st.sesion_state['filepath'] = file_path
|
37 |
else:
|
38 |
-
file_name = file_path = 'sample/Ethiopia_s_2021_10 Year Development Plan.txt'
|
39 |
st.session_state['filename'] = file_name
|
40 |
st.session_state['filepath'] = file_path
|
|
|
31 |
('South Africa:Low Emission strategy',
|
32 |
'Ethiopia: 10 Year Development Plan'))
|
33 |
if option is 'South Africa:Low Emission strategy':
|
34 |
+
file_name = file_path = 'docStore/sample/South Africa_s Low Emission Development Strategy.txt'
|
35 |
st.session_state['filename'] = file_name
|
36 |
st.sesion_state['filepath'] = file_path
|
37 |
else:
|
38 |
+
file_name = file_path = 'docStore/sample/Ethiopia_s_2021_10 Year Development Plan.txt'
|
39 |
st.session_state['filename'] = file_name
|
40 |
st.session_state['filepath'] = file_path
|