“…Studies have investigated its origins and capacity to usher in the nation's development needs (Clapham, ), explored its nature as a mode of governing (Gebremariam & Bayu, ), analysed its interaction and relations with the peasantry (Planel, ), outlined its role in relation to ethnic diversity (Abbink, ), and assessed the manifestation of its “revolutionary” ideological base and subsequent state building (Vaughan, ). Routely (, p. 3) argues that the developmental state could usher in “a route to social justice” and/or “economic prosperity.” We analyse the Ethiopian developmental state model that, according to official statistics, enabled double‐digit macroeconomic growth for the last decade (2005/2006–2015/2016) (World Bank, ; Cochrane & Bekele, ), with respect to its capacity to promote inclusive development. In part, we present this analysis by exploring the shift in governance, with the rise of a new prime minister in 2018, and comparing how this differs from the decades that preceded it.…”