Almost all organized societies did make concerted efforts to establish institutions that were deemed essential to the smooth functioning of societies. Understanding and cherishing the shared values incorporated in the various institutions used to signify upright citizenship. Amongst these values, the rule of law, freedom of expression, basic human rights, etc. stand out! Unfortunately, as societies became more hierarchical and regimented, as is the case today, certain inalienable rights of individuals were visibly devalued. The integrity system gradually gave way to superficial concerns that prioritized the protection of entrenched powers more than anything. The ‘deep state’ of the industrially advanced countries is a living proof of this generalized societal degradation!
Freedom of expression is one of those societal values that is being eroded in our hyper technical modernity. The modern informatics that flourished around the 1990s started out by empowering the typical global sheeple (human mass). As technical complexity increased and consolidation within the sector accelerated, the big corporation came to dominate the creation and distribution of information. Today only six corporations in the US account for over 90% of broadcasting! The states themselves have become enthusiastic collaborators in these undemocratic undertakings. See the articles next column, on page 28 & 41. To be sure, the traditional media outlets (print media, cables, etc.) have been losing their turf to the new informatics. In fact, many of them have completely collapsed. Some of the significant ones were bought out by the new tech giants, with the explicit support of the states. Amazon, Google, etc., are now, amongst other things, the new media giants! The extensive reach these tech giants have developed has become a threat to global democracy. As a result, the positive and empowering aspect of the new informatics are being lost swiftly. For instance, the US government has already paved the way for the big tech companies to regulate the flow of Internet traffic, as they wish, thereby undermining the traditionally democratic nature of the Internet!
Surveillance has always been the hallmark of new informatics. In its latest version, the gadgets of surveillance range from the modest mobile phones to lap tops/desktops all the way to the big mainframe computers used by institutions. The Internet itself is comprised of worldwide networks to facilitate espionages. Thanks to people like Edward Snowden, the global sheeple is now aware of the various manipulative technics employed by the global power that be (TPTB). The ‘totalitarian’ nature of our modern existence is no more in dispute! Even in the states of the periphery, surveillance has become one of the main functions of the state. Controlling the masses remains one of the objectives of modern states, poor or rich!
Outright censorship is also one of the objectives of modern states. The ‘deep state’ is fully collaborating with the new tech firms, in this particular regard. Thanks to people like Manning and Assange, the world has started to get real and valid information about the workings of the ‘deep state.’ Wikileaks has revealed plenty about the evil projects of the powerful states. Information that has been suppressed for years is now coming to light. False flags that were used as excuses to start wars; assassinations of activists/freedom fighters/peaceful revolutionaries, etc. that were hidden from the public eyes are being revealed by the peaceful warriors of Wikileaks and their likes. Obviously, the ‘deep state’ is out to get those who are at the forefront of these exposures. Assange and Snowden are already criminalized and condemned by TPTB because they dared to tell the truth. Many others have not been so lucky!
When misinformation becomes one of the main objectives of entrenched interests, the global sheeple has to start fighting back. To this end, the need for comprehensive community media becomes paramount. If truth be told, the future of private media is very bleak. To start with, these outlets depend on their sponsors for their commercial survival/revenues. Moreover, promoters, by and large, are not very much into telling the truth, rather they are interested in what sells. Usually it is ‘make believe’ that sells, not necessarily the truth. That is why we have been advocating community media for years. Fully funded by taxpayers, but independently run by elected citizenry and unaffiliated with entrenched interests, is what should be the future of information communication. The sheeple need to have access to the whole truth and not only to those preached by the state and the paid-media!
“Nothing can now be believed which is seen in a newspaper. Truth itself becomes suspicious by being put into that polluted vehicle. The real extent of this state of misinformation is known only to those who are in situations to confront facts within their knowledge with the lies of the day.” -Thomas Jefferson to John Norvell, 1807. Good Day!
CENSORSHIP, SURVEILLANCE & MISINFORMATION
The operational mechanism of economies
The economy is about how wealth is created, distributed and consumed. It concerns the ways in which a country produces, distributes and consumes the tangible, material commodities of life. It is also about how the proceeds or income from these activities are distributed between those that contribute toward them: capitalist businesses, workers, the state and the whole of society. Every person affects the economy in some way and we are all affected by it.
Economics may appear to be the study of complicated tables and charts, statistics and numbers, but, more specifically, it is the study of what constitutes rational human behaviour in the endeavor to fulfill needs and wants. As an individual, for example, one can face the problem of having only limited resources with which to fulfill their wants and needs, as a result, they must make certain choices with their money.
One can probably spend part of their money on rent, electricity and food. Then they might use the rest to go to the movies and/or buy a new pair of jeans. Economists are interested in the choices they make, and inquire into why, for instance, they might choose to spend their money on a new DVD player instead of replacing his/her old TV. They would want to know whether they would still buy a carton of cigarettes if prices increased by two Birr per pack. The underlying essence of economics is trying to understand how both individuals and nations behave in response to certain material constraints.
While many excellent economists have shed light on a wide variety of subjects, many people still have only a sketchy grasp of how economies work. And what passes for economic “science” is often bunk. Fortunately, technological progress doesn’t depend on people’s economic understanding of why it occurs, although it can be stunted by bad policies.
The world economic history well recorded that fact that political economy, as it was then called, emerged in the eighteenth century, when the Scottish philosopher Adam Smith pursued “an inquiry into the nature and causes of the wealth of nations”. His key insight, that competition between selfish profit-seeking producers tends to advance the common good, is profound and often true.
At the time, political economy was descriptive, analytical and firmly anchored in a political and social context. In the nineteenth century, it was rebadged as the science of economics, akin to a branch of mechanical engineering. In keeping with the science of the time, economies were thought of as gigantic, self-equilibrating machines.
Philippe Legrain, in his April 24, 2014 published book entitled “European Spring: Why Our Economies and Politics are in a Mess – and How to Put Them Right”argued that, increasingly, economics ran away with itself. Instead of trying to describe the world as it is, with the economy as a form of human interaction, it imagined a mathematical ideal detached from its social, political and historical context.
Assumptions that were not approximately right but completely wrong became doctrine: that people have known, stable, independent and well-ordered preferences; that based on those preferences, they “maximize” rather than operate by rules of thumb and make do.
According to Philippe Legrain, that they know how the economy works and have “rational expectations” about what the future holds, which conforms to a known probability distribution; and that as a result, markets, not least financial ones, are “efficient” and tend towards equilibrium.
On the basis of these false assumptions, economists created a fantasy world – that’s fine, lots of people love Harry Potter – and then proceeded to give advice as if the real world was like their fantasy. And people believed them. Which is bonkers, as economist themselves called them.
Philippe Legrain noted that simplifying false assumptions allowed macroeconomists to model economies as if they consisted of an all-seeing, all-knowing single representative agent rather than as the complex interaction between many types of agent; to abstract from the financial system altogether, and to ignore the role of particular institutions. As a result, mainstream economics has very little to say about how new ideas come about and how they are deployed across the economy –which is a pity considering they are the two main drivers of growth in advanced economies.
Because it has no coherent account of innovation, mainstream economics often misses the point. Immigrants are seen as generic drones who fit into vacancies in the labor market, rather than diverse sparks of new ideas. Free trade purportedly delivers a tiny one-off gain instead of being a stimulus for competitive improvement. Entrepreneurs don’t exist.
Likewise, mainstream macroeconomics has no coherent account of how the financial sector interacts with the economy. Standard models ignore it altogether; newer ones tack it on in an ad hoc way. Milton Friedman, a famous American economist, once countered that theories should be judged by their ability to predict events rather than by the realism of their assumptions.
On that basis, according to Philippe Legrain, orthodox economics is a flop. Physics is a wonderful science that told us how to send a man to the moon. Economics pretending to be physics is a disaster that led to the crash. The notion that economies are stable and predictable and tend towards a steady state which isin effect a linear forward projection of equilibrium over time, is nonsense.
Philippe Legrain, lashed that ironically, this neo-classical theory is often advanced by free-marketers who don’t understand its implications. If this really was an accurate description of how an economy works, a central planner could do the job just as well as the market system.
Philippe Legrain acknowledged that economies are in fact complex systems that are forever changing in often unpredictable and non-linear ways as a result of the interaction between different economic agents with a limited grasp of how the economy works and little idea of what the future holds.
MoT promises Access buyers solution soon
The Ministry of Trade (MoT) has promised frustrated home buyers from Access Real Estate that they will settle their dilemma soon, but they did not give a specific time.
A week ago the main committee of Access Home buyers visited the ministry office to discuss why it has taken so long to find a solution to their problem. Since they appeared without an appointment they did not have enough time to express their concerns, while the Bekele Bulado (PhD), Minister of MoT, agreed to meet them on Wednesday January 10 at the MoT hall, according to sources.
The committee and Bekele met on Wednesday. Sources told Capital that in the meeting the minister promised to solve the problem as soon as possible.
The committee members representing home buyers at 19 sites claimed that the ministry is the body that should give a solution to their case, according to sources who attended the meeting.
“Bekele also told the committee members to follow the case as usual and insist that other relevant government offices like the city government speed up the case and provide a solution,” sources told Capital.
The audit report carried out by the Audit Services Corporation and submitted to the Ministry of Trade on April 7, 2017 indicated that the company had collected 1.3 billion birr. The major share or 1.16 billion birr came from home buyers.
No one who gave Access money for a home actually received one even though the company promised to transfer the houses five years ago. This eventually led to the Prime Minster promising the 2,500 home buyers a solution at the meeting. The home buyers sued Access and affiliates and the courts mostly ruled in their favor.
A few weeks ago, the home buyers committee wrote a letter for the second time within a few months asking to meet with the PM. In their letter they complained that even though the main committee was formed by executive order of the PM and some actions were taken, the 2,500 home buyers have not gotten any solution. They begged the PM to meet with them to explain their problems.
The joint letter signed by Mebrat Woldetensai, board chair of Access Real Estate, and Aklog Seyum, chair of the main committee for the home buyers that was issued in early November 2017 asked the Attorney General about how the legal process was going since they had requested that Access Real Estate be held accountable for their actions.
In another letter signed on October 23, 2017 a separate group of home buyers also asked the PM for support. They asked to be compensated for what they paid to Access Real Estate. “We are not represented by the main committee of home buyers and the proposals tabled by the committee do not represent us,” the letter signed by Bekele Woldemichael, who was mentioned as chair of the committee of 168 people who purchased homes from Access and Pacific Link, said.
They asked the government to involve them in any decision it makes. They also wanted the government to form an independent caretaker administration and board to get their home. “If our request is granted we will stop the court process and work with the government’s decision,” the letter reads.
Aklog Seyoum, chair of the main committee, agreed with the claim of the other group of home buyers about the representation. “The main committee is working for the home buyers who gave legally authenticated representation to find a solution in an organized manner, but there is a group who filed a case at the court and got a final decision from the court,” he told Capital.
The group mentioned as a separate committee did not get representation from the main committee, according to Aklog.
“We are looking for an administrative and political decision from the government but they preferred to go the court,” he elaborated.
“We are waiting for a solution supported by the government, they have a right to go on the way that they prefer,” Aklog argued.
Seed exports to be allowed in hopes of attracting international investors
The Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources is developing a regulation to allow seed producers to export their products, Capital learned.
Experts said the new rule would allow the country to export more fruits and vegetables. Currently companies are allowed to grow seeds but not allowed to export them.
“The case was very complicated. The government preferred preventing seed exports because they thought giant international seed producers and sellers did not want to follow the procedures like tracing seed identity,” an expert who preferred anonymity told Capital.
They went on to say that currently big international seed producers are exporting on a trial basis but they declined to mention names.
According to the new information that Capital obtained the government is now interested in opening up the fruit and vegetable sector to expand seed production. This would make them more accessible locally and easier to export.
“There was not a specific regulation about the export of seeds,” Tewodros Zewdie, Executive Director of the Ethiopian Horticulture Producer and Exporters Association (EHPEA) said.
The regulation supporting the growing demand of giant seed producers is in the process of being created and it is expected to be applicable in the current budget year.
The country ratified, Seed Proclamation no. 206, in 2000, but it was not supported by further regulations or directives. However, article 35 sub article 1 stated: The Council of Ministers may issue regulations necessary for the implementation of this proclamation and sub article 2 added that the agency that oversees fruits and vegetables should issue the directive.
Meanwhile the country has not allowed seed production for export, small seed growers that are very small and engage in very few products are allowed to supply their product for the local market.
Gebremichael Habte, agronomist and consultant in agri-investment, told Capital that the upcoming regulation would be a good opportunity for the country to generate more hard currency. He said that it would also create more jobs and save hard currency that goes to importing seeds.
“Seeds are expensive when they are imported,” Gebremichael said.
Experts said that this should help the country produce more fruits and vegetables.
“The new law may allow the large scale industry players and household farmers to obtain seeds cheaply and get a wider amount of varieties,” experts said.
“Currently the fruit and vegetable sector is not growing as expected and lack of seeds in one reason,” Tewodros said.
According to Tewodros, fruits and vegetables have not succeeded as well as horticulture has.
“Quality seeds for vegetables and fruits are not easily available, international seed producers were not engaged in the country,” he told Capital.
It is good news that the government is now developing a regulation to allow the international seed growers to produce the product locally. He said that several promotional activities have been conducted to attract potential seed producers to Ethiopia.
Several companies have already expressed an interest in investing in fruits and vegetables, according to experts.
This is a good time to invest in fruits and vegetables because the global diet trend is changing as more people are turning away from meat and the world’s population is increasing.
Tewodros mentioned that agro logistical issues like container shortages and shipping are another challenge when it comes to exporting more fruits and vegetables.
“In the coming years we would like to see better conditions,” he said.
International chain supermarkets are looking into Ethiopian fruits and vegetables.
If the policy, infrastructure and rules of the government become easier experts say produce production would increase.
Recently strawberries have been exported. In the past few years the number of strawberry farms has increased to 15 from two about three years ago. They are also exporting to Europe.
A report indicated that fruits and vegetables have a lot of potential, the Association head said.
Data indicated that the country has spent a significant amount of hard currency to import seeds and the amount is growing rapidly. For instance in 2012 Ethiopia imported 127.9 tons of vegetables with a total value of USD 3.3 million and that amount has increased to 553 tons with value of USD 15.1 million in 2016.
Capital’s effort to get further information from Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources was unfruitful.


