This Chapter has argued that, even though socially and historically disadvantaged groups (e.g., geo-politically peripheral ethnic groups and women) have been given a nominal advantage at the entry point (by slightly lowering admission cut-off points) and despite the fact that participation has considerably widened, social equity is far from being a reality in Ethiopian HE. The persisting inequality in the form of high attrition rates and low graduation rates among females and ethnic minorities, low female participation in the fields of science and technology, prejudicial views and hostilities against women and, overall, the subordinate position of women in HE clearly shows that framing the problem of inequality as a mere lack of access and a human capital disadvantage is misleading and counterproductive.