34 CLASS AND REVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
force in sub-Saharan Africa in the mid-I 960s. The Ethiopian
Air Force and, to a lesser extent, the Navy were also built up to
respectable strength by generous doses of military aid. In the
r course of two decades the total amount of such aid given to
\ Ethiopia exceeded th;t granted by the United States to the
f rest of the continent for similar purposes.
6
--- Substantial economic aid was also provided. The total for the
same period minus loans was slightly less than that given for ' ' . military aid. A swarm of United States government agencies
established themselves in the country, and their funds and influence permeated all sectors of Ethiopian society. Particularly
conspicuous was their presence in the educational sector, where
the largest Peace Corps contingent assigned to an African
country was engaged in teaching, while the country's sole university was completely dominated by United States funds and
personnel. Generous scholarship and travel funds brought
hundreds of Ethiopians to the United States each year. That
country also became Ethiopia's most important trading partner,
taking the bulk of its coffee exports. American private investment followed the initiative of its government, and by the late
1960s more than two hundred American firms were active in
Ethiopia. In return for its aid, the United States secured a
supine ally in a region where it was almost without any friends.
In more practical terms, it was able to establish a huge air base
at Asmara devoted to communication and electronic intelligence
functions, which was completely self-sustained and wholly
outside Ethiopian jurisdiction.
Supported by timely assistance from abroad, the structure of
a centralized bureaucracy soon took shape and firmness. Its
growth acquired new, powerful momentum by giving rise to a
new social class of civil and military officialdom. The character
of this group was stamped by the unique aspects of the situation that gave it birth. The institutionalization of the governmental process was cast in the conventional bureaucratic form.
However, the structures were designed to function as appen6. For details see Hearings before the Sub-committee on United States Security
Agreements and Commitments Abroad, Committee on Foreign Relations, U.S.
Senate, 91st Congress, Part 8, 1 June 1970. Ethiopia had at least 40 000
men under arms at that time. '
IMPERIALISM AND TRANSFORMATION 35
dages of the throne, which now reached the zenith of its power.
To mana~e these institutions, a class of civil and military officials
was required who could fulfil the exacting role of royal retainers,
that is, to wield great power without possessing it. For more
than three decades, this task was meticulously performed by a
group of men especially recruited and groomed for this purpose
by Haile Selassie himself. Of diverse social origin, their common
denominator was modem education and a strong patrimonial
bond linking them to the monarch. This quite small group of
men monopolized the top offices of government and the armed
forces for the entire postwar period.
The class we shall call the bureaucratic-military bourgeoisie
grew around this inner core of retainers. Its members were
recruited initially from graduates returning from abroad, and
subsequently from local graduates. The process of recruitment
remained a personalized one involving the throne and its top
retainers. Consequently, while education remained a primary
qualification, it was seldom sufficient in itself. Traditional
status, patronage and nepotism were crucial factors in the
recruitment process. The educated sons of the aristocracy
enjoyed the highest preference, while relatives and clients of
inner core members followed closely behind. Thus, the dominant characteristics of the older retainer group were reproduced
in a constantly widening circle and became typical of the entire
class. The character of the military hierarchy was not different.
It included men trained abroad in the pre-war period, and
others trained at home later. Promotion to the top of the
hierarchy was basically a matter of patronage, and depended
mainly on a man's connections and political trustworthiness.
As the new institutions developed and the pre-eminence of
the centre was secured, this class rose to the heights of political
and social power. Since the strengthening of the centre was
accomplished at the expense of the provincial aristocracy, the
two classes were placed initially in a position of active rivalry.
Supported by the throne and counselled by foreign advisers,
the bureaucrats promoted various measures which undermined
the traditional autonomy of the aristocracy and curtailed some
of the customary privileges enjoyed by that class. The process
of taming the feudal nobility proceeded at a snail's pace. It
36 CLASS AND REVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
began in 1941 with the first decree issued by the restored
regime. This listed a set of administrative regulations for the
provincial government, an area over which the aristocracy exercised complete control. The restrictions imposed on provincial
officials by the decree provide a clear indication of the broad
power they had enjoyed previously. The new regulations forbade them to raise military forces, to maintain their own police
units, to negotiate and sign treaties with other states, to impose
and collect taxes and dues other than those fixed by tffe central
government, to accept money and other gifts from the people,
and to appoint, dismiss, or transfer subordinates on their own
authority.
One significant provision was for the payment of salaries to
provincial officialdom from the central treasury, and the concomitant proscription on the collection of gifts and other dues,
a traditional euphemism for bribery. Although official venality
was hardly affected, the provision of salaries meant the elimination of gult attached to office. A multitude of other forms of
gult held by individuals and institutions was not immediately
affected. However, subsequent measures undermined all forms
of secular gult and eventually abolished it entirely. It proved a
long and tortuous process. Another decree, issued in 1941 ,
abolished labour service and other customary forms of tribute
owed to the gultegna. In 1942, a uniform rate of taxation was
imposed, payable in the newly issued official currency. In 1944,
the taxation system was revised, and all customary forms of
tribute were outlawed. Henceforth, taxes were collected on
behalf of the Ministry of Finance, and receipts were issued to
the taxpayer. These measures did not spell the end of gult. What
they did was to expose its parasitic nature and render it vulnerable to further attack. The rise of an administrative structure
gradually made the gultegna superfluous. The only meaningful
function he continued to perform was that of local judge, and
this was valued for the income it provided in fees and fines. As
long as gult existed, the feudal class continued to receive a share
of the peasant produced surplus. This was represented by a
portion of the land tax which the gultegna was allowed to keep
for himself. It should be noted that four different taxes were
imposed on the peasantry during the postwar period. These
IMPERIALISM AND TRANSFORMATION 37
included the land tax, the tithe, a tax for education and another
for health services, although the rural areas had preciously little
of either service. The gultegna 's share came out of the land tax.
Moreover, the gultegna was exen1pted from the payment of land
tax on his own rist or personally claimed land.
The various sections of the feudal ruling class were affected
differently by these measures and related actions of the central
government. This is not surprising, for they were calculated to
have a differential impact . To begin with, the position of the
Church was not in the least affected, because none of these, or
subsequent, measures applied to Church gult or to the landholding rights of the common clergy. Initially, the government
made an attempt to deprive the Church of administrative and
judicial jurisdiction within itsgult and to transfer these functions
to the provincial administration. This move provoked serious
resistance and had to be abandoned. The decree of 1944, which
eliminated traditional forms of tribute, did not mention the
Church, and peasants in many areas refused to provide labour
service and other customary dues. Heeding the complaints of
the clergy, the government issued another decree in 194 7,
ordering the continuation of customary services and dues owed
the Church. Later, the Church benefited from the imposition of
the taxes for education and health, because it was allowed to
collect both within its gult, and to retain the former. It appears
that it also retained the latter tax, although it was supposed to
be turned over to the government. In addition, the Church collected and retained the tithe, as well as its own tribute on the
land. Moreover, although taxes to the government were paid in
cash, the Church continued to collect its own in kind, and as
the currency gradually diminished in value, the impositions of
the Church became more onerous on the peasant than those
of the government.
The landowning class in the southern region was only minimally affected. The abolition of gult attached to office proved
of no concern to this class in view of its reliance on landholding
rather than officeholding as a guarantee of privilege. Because
these landholdings were held as personal property, and the
peasants settled on them were regarded as tenants, the abolition
38 CLASS AND REVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
of the feudal obligations by the 1944 decree did not apply to
them, for these obligations represented payment of rent to the
landlord rather than tax due · to the state. The landlord was
legally obliged to pay the tithe, but normally collected this tax
from his tenants. The tenants were liable to all the other taxes,
in addition to the rent collected by the landlord. Landlords who
held gult grants collected a share of the land tax as described
above, and enjoyed exemption from this tax on their personal
property. Finally, the landlords paid no tax on the rent income
they received from their tenants.
The northern provincial aristocracy was affected by the
elimination of gult attached to office and the curtailment of
feudal obligations rendered by the peasantry to secular gult
in the past. Its position was further undermined by the institutionalization of the provincial administration, and the threatened displacement of the feudal governor by a cohort of civil
servants, army and police officers controlled by the central
government. The trend presaged not only loss of established
privilege, but also a corresponding loss of control over the
peasantry, the source of all privilege. The feudal class resisted
tenaciously and with considerable success. This success was due
to its ability to manipulate peasant sentiment and have it
ranged on its side in every confrontation with the centre. For
obvious reasons, the clergy provided inestimable help in cementing provincial solidarity against the growing threat to the feudal
structure. The peasant's susceptibility to such manipulation
stemmed from the age old fear for the security of his rist. This
fear was greatly exacerbated by the fate that befell the southern
peasantry. Ever since then, the intentions of the central government remained highly suspect, and any state action impinging
on land was likely to provoke misunderstanding among the
extremely wary peasants. In this situation, the curtailment of
gult privileges, although of obvious benefit to the cultivator
was ' not likely to be properly appreciated. Gult and rist were
twin features of the traditional system. A threat against one
could easily be made to appear as a common danger for both.
The northern aristocracy normally had little difficulty in manipulating appearances in this respect. As a result, almost every
initiative taken by the centre elicited disturbing reaction in the
IMPERIALISM AND TRANSFORMATION 39
northern provinces, and numerous uprisings occurred during
the postwar period.
The aims of provincial uprisings in the north were quite
limited and entirely reactionary, reflecting mainly the aristocracy's concern over the encroachment of their domain by the
central government. In this respect, they were far from unsuccessful. The ultimate result was the regime's failure to gain full
control of the provincial administration in the northern provinces. This key branch of government remained the bastion of
feudalism. Although appointments were made at the centre,
they were reserved for members of the local aristocracy; a rule
that admitted of few exceptions. Contrary to regulations, low
level appointments continued to be made locally and the centre
was simply notified of the fact. The central government's
control over appointments in the provincial administration of
the southern provinces was unhampered by such restrictions.
Yet here also, office was reserved for the aristocracy and imperial retainers, with the Shoa branch enjoying decided preference. The continued dominance of the feudal ruling class in
this branch of government ensured the continuity of traditional
methods of rule. No attempt was made to further modernize
the provincial administration, and nothing was added to the
regulations issued in 1941 during the next three decades.7
Governors continued to rule the provinces like minor satraps,
and did little to diminish the traditional reputation of their
office for insatiable venality. The judiciary was the other branch
of government which remained the domain of the aristocracy,
and it also preserved undamaged its legendary reputation for
corruption.
According to the taxation system that prevailed until the
mid-l 960s, the gultegna and landholding class was taxed neither
on its holdings nor on the income derived from them, while the
cultivator was subject to no less than four different taxes. Moreover, the privileged class was still able to appropriate part of the
land tax revenue, though not as large a share as previously. As· a
7. A scheme for local self-administration, concocted by the bureaucrats in the
late 1960s, was turned down on the grounds that it would impose heavier
financial obligations on the local communities.
40 CLASS AND REVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
result, the state's share of the revenue from land remained
stagnant throughout this period. However, it wasn't simply
concern with revenue that led to the last round of reforms in
1966-67. By this time, capitalism was gnawing at the roots of
the feudal plant. Goaded by foreign pressure, its domestic
sponsors were anxious to sweep away the last vestiges of the
traditional system. Land had to be freed from the remaining
feudal constraints in order to enter the market as a commodity.
In 1966, gult in all its secular forms was finally eliminated.
Only the Church continued to enjoy this feudal privilege. This
meant that former gultegnas now lost the share of the land tax
they had previously appropriated, as well as the tax exemption
they had enjoyed on their own land.
This was not an unmitigated loss. Since tax payment established title to land, the former gultegnas were given the opportunity to acquire modern legal title to those parts of their
former gult which they claimed as personal property. The
implementation C1f the reform had only begun when the regime
itself passed into history. Nevertheless the gultegnas in the
southern provinces were claiming large portions of their former
gult as personal property, and no objection was raised to the
validity of their claims. In 1967, an agricultural income tax was
imposed to replace the former tithe, leaving the other three
taxes in effect. The income tax was graduated and it applied
to all forms of income fro.m land, including rent. Thus, the landowning class was to be taxed on its income for the first time.
These measur~s confirmed and enshrined in modern legal
form the dispossession of the southern peasantry. The removal
of the last feudal trappings surrounding property relationships
revealed the stark fact of massive and irredeemable land alienation. Its natural corollary was tenancy. The extent of this condition in the:; southern region was staggering. According to the
regime's own surveys, it exceeded 50 per cent of the holdings in
three provinces and 40 per cent in four others. Another corollary was absentee landlordism. The same surveys intimated
the massiveness of this phenomenon as well, although the nature
of the data was far from precise. 8
8. In the late 1960s, the Ministry of Land Reform and Administration made an
attempt to Jive up to its name, by proposing legislation which would have
RIA LISM AND TRANSFORMATION
rMPE 41
The combined effect of these measures was markedly different in the two regions of Ethiopia. Tenancy in the north was
a minor phenomenon, the burden of oppressed minorities,
especially Muslims. The ristegnas tolerated such groups as long
as they disclaimed any right to land. They became explosively
resentful of any intimation to the contrary, hence, they were
highly opposed to any effort to regularize or improve the
tenant's status through governmental action. The ristegna's
position was strengthened considerably during the postwar
period. Rist was freed of all feudal liabilities and obligations,
and emerged as unencumbered freehold, though still within the
traditional kinship system. I ts status was recognized and safeguarded in a special chapter of the Civil Code. Nevertheless,
peasant mistrust of government motives barely diminished
during this period, and neither did peasant susceptibility to the
manipulative influence of the aristocracy and clergy. Disgruntled
by the abolition of gult and the highhandedness of a Shoa
governor, the feudal ruling class in Gojjam province seized the
occasion of the imposition of the agricultural income tax in
1967 to fan peasant suspicion by misinterpreting its objectives.
They were ably assisted by the government's mindless haste to
implement the measure immediately without any attempt to
communicate its import to the peasantry. The result was a
spontaneous uprising which pitted the peasants against every
branch of the regime's repressive apparatus, the Air Force
included, and lasted nearly a year. Having stayed on the sidelines, the Gojjam notables then offered themselves as intermediaries, and a number of them won local appointment. They
then set about energetically and successfully to suppress the
uprising.
While the retreat of feudalism left the northern peasant
essentially a smallholder, it sealed a luckless fate for the majority
of soutltern peasants as landless proletarians. In the traditional
affected landowner interests adversely. One proposal was for a graduated tax
on unutilized land, which was designed to force the cultivation or sale of _such
land. Another offered minimal protection to tenants in the form of wntten
leases a ceiling of one-third on rent - the Civil Code allowed rent up to twothirds' of the produce - and a ban on other landlord exactions. -~e proposals
were never seriously considered by the government, and the Minister responsible for them was dismissed shortly afterwards.
Nlfttlf
42 CLASS AND R EVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
mode of production, the disadvantages of that position were
concealed to a considerable extent by the landowner's inability
to exploit the land without the mediation of the tenant, a fact
that gave the latter security of tenure. In the 1960s, the advent
of capitalist commercial agriculture in the southern region
swiftly exposed the precariousness of the tenant's position on
the land.9 The peasant's earlier sullen resentment against landlord exploitation was now transformed into an increasingly
clear awareness of the antagonism between these two classes.
In the nature of the situation, where class and national divisions
largely coincided, it seemed inevitable that corresponding
forces would combine and engage their opposites in violent
conflict. The potential for convergence of class and national
antagonism was rife in southern Ethiopia, and had already
manifested itself at the periphery of the state, particularly
among the Somali people in the Ogaden region.
The struggle of the Somali against the old regime spanned
the entire postwar period. The widely ranging pastoralists in
the southeastern corner of Ethiopia never reconciled themselves to the rule of the ancien regime, which sought to restrict
their movements, imposed a livestock tax on them, and laid a
claim on all their land, without offering the slightest return for
such impositions. Sporadic clashes steadily exacerbated the
situation throughout the 1940s and 1950s. Somali resistance
inevitably turned to irredentism once the Somali Republic
across the border attained independence in 1960. The conflict
escalated and kept Ethiopia and Somalia on the brink of war
for several years. A state of emergency was declared in the
Ogaden which was placed under military rule for the duration.
The government tried to suborn the Somalia chiefs with money
and titles, while doing nothing to allay the hostility of the
people. In the early 1960s, a rebellion broke out in the adjacent
province of Bale. It began with incidents of resistance against
taxation among the Oromo peasantry, and escalated into attacks
on local towns where the landlords were congregated. The
government in tum mobilized the landlords and despatched
them against the rebels, with license to loot as their reward.
9. See below, section on 'Capitalism and Agriculture', pp.55-60.
IMPERIALISM AND TRANSFORMATION
43
Since the landlords were mostly of northern origin, the confrontation represented a neat conjunction of class and national
antagonisms. The landlords proved no match for the peasants,
and a succession of military expeditions had to be mounted to
contain the rebels who resorted to guerrilla tactics. The uprising
persisted on a reduced scale until 1970, when its leaders negotiated an amnesty for themselves. Nevertheless, the peasantry
suffered grievously. No less than 36.5 per cent of the measured
land in the district where the rebellion had centred was classified
as confiscated in 1968.
44
Chapter 3
Peripheral Capitalism
and Development
L pia's legendary isolation preserved t?e indigenous feu?al
,{';~~~~ system until well into the twentieth century. Havmg
ended this isolation and linked itself with the aggressive forces
of capitalism, the ancien regime exposed itself as an anachronism
condemned to extinction. However, its demise was not the
result of a bourgeois revolution. In fact, the chances of a bourgeois succession in the classic manner were buried along with
the ancien regime. The explanation for this must be sought in
the nature of the capitalist intrusion that occurred during the
reign of this regime.
The new mode of production embodied all the defects of
peripheral capitalism, many of them in an exaggerated form. In
order to compensate partially for the lack of conspicuous
economic attraction, the regime enacted an Investment Code
which was described as 'one of Africa's most liberal'.
10 In
addition, it gave land practically free, provided monopoly protection for any industry, and prevented the organization of
labour in order to maintain low wages. It also invested heavily
in the infrastructure required to sustain profitable investment,
and in numerous joint ventures with foreign capital. Stimulated
by the appearance of a domestic market - the state itself
emerged as a major consumer - western capital was attracted
into manufacturing for import substitution. By 1970, the
number of industrial enterprises employing more than 20
persons rose to 300. As a result, Ethiopia acquired a modern
economic sector which was mostly foreign owned. By 1967 7 5
per cent of the private paid up capital in manufacturing w;s in
10. TheNew York Times, 17 June 1967.
PERIPHERAL CAPITALISM AND DEVELOPMENT 45
foreign hands.11 The drain of profits from the country was largely
unchecked, since even the very liberal restrictions of the Investment Code were normally evaded. The management of this sector
was in the same hands. In 1968, out of 7 6 member concerns of
the Federation of Employers of Ethiopia, only eight had Ethiopian management.
12 The situation in trade was no different.
Foreign owned firms controlled both import and export trade,
while foreign communities resident in the country dominated the
intermediate trade sector. Thus instead of promoting the
development of an indigenous bourgeoisie with a base in the
modern economic sector, intruding capitalism pre-empted this
role and precluded the development of such a class.
Capital could not avoid creating its counterpart, wage labour.
The Ethiopian working class began to form in the 1950s with the
appearance of manufacturing industry. It grew to a very modest
size by the mid-l 960s, when countervailing trends set in to
block further growth. 13 The bulk of the labour force was of
rural origin, uneducated and unskilled. In the given situation of
unlimited supply of labour of this kind, Ethiopian workers were
easily and harshly victimized. The average daily wage for unskilled labour in Addis Ababa remained between 1 to 1. 25
Ethiopian dollars from the early 1960s to the mid-l 970s,
despite the inflationary trend in prices during the latter years.
Skilled workers commanded higher wages because of their
scarcity, but they were a small minority of the labour force.
There were no training programmes to upgrade worker skills.
No effort was made to compel employers to localize their
work force, and numerous foreign artisans continued to enter
the country. Ethiopia never had a minimum wage law, nor any
11. Eshetu Chole, 'The Mode of Production in Ethiopia and the Realities Thereof, Chalienge (N.Y.~ Ethiopia Students Union, North America), XI, 3, 1971,
p.11.
12. Seyoum Gebregzhiaber, 'The Development of Some Institutions Concerned
with Labour Relations in Ethiopia', (Addis Ababa: Haile Selassie I University,
1969), p.81.
13. The official figures for the 1960s converge on an estimate of 400,000 persons
in urban productive employment. Approximately half this number were in
small scale industry and are not precisely accounted for in official statistics.
Among the rest, construction employed 100,000 manufacturing 51,000, and
other sectors employed a combined total of 40,000 workers or so.
46 CLASS AND REVOLUTION IN ETHIOPIA
other form of effective protection for its workers. Employers
were free to use any method designed to cut labour costs, and
they used all the familiar ones, and then some more.
14
No comments:
Post a Comment
اكتب تعليق حول الموضوع