Abstract:
This project paper mainly focuses on the role of bank and other financial institutions in Ethiopian
construction industry. The paper context mainly comprises on methodological, conceptual and
contextual frame work.
This paper is initiated and scoped to local banks among the financial institutes and contractors in
Ethiopia. In Ethiopia there are only two government and eleven private commercial banks that
provide services and facilities to the construction firms.
In Ethiopia there are a large number of construction projects for the development of
infrastructures. The existing construction projects are full of financial and managerial problems.
Construction projects are time and cost bounded. Generally, construction projects objectives are
stated in terms of project completion time, budgeted cost and stipulated quality specifications.
Construction projects consume a huge amount of resources. One of the major resources and the
resource by which to own other is cash, so managing and utilizing cash flow efficiently is
essential and to perform this, firms should prepare cash flow forecast. Cash flow forecast is
necessary to understand projects cash demand with respect to time, the time when projects
demand external financial support, and to plan in advance from where to get it. Contractors in
Ethiopia, who are the main actors of construction projects, have low financial capacity. Projects
in Ethiopia are full of financial constraints. To solve this contractors try to finance projects from
different sources. Generally, there are two sources of finance for construction firms that are
internal (depreciation allowance, accounts payable, wages payable, retained earnings, and
accrued taxes) and external (term loan, equipment loan, construction loan, overdraft facility, and
bridge financing). The external sources of finance need the involvement of the third party
like banks.
The basic instruments used for this paper are questioner and interview to domestic contractors of
different category and commercial banks. After the collection of data, analysis has been made.
The analysis of the result shows that the Ethiopian contractors are full of financial scarcity, the
information gap between contractors and banks is significant, cash-flow forecast is vital for
successful project completion. On the other hand the role of banks in minimizing contractors‟ cash flow problem is not sufficient.