The Daily News Egypt

Egypt requires $675 bn of investment­s to meet its infrastruc­ture needs: G20

- By Hagar Omran

“Egypt’s infrastruc­ture investment needs are large and cannot be met on a ‘business as usual’ basis. According to the G20’s Global Infrastruc­ture Outlook, Egypt will require $675bn of investment­s over the next 20 years to meet its infrastruc­ture needs,” mentioned a Tuesday report by the World Bank (WB) named ‘EGYPT Enabling Private Investment and Commercial Financing in Infrastruc­ture’.

While public finances are on a firmer footing, the overall fiscal situation remains challengin­g, added the report, noting that relying on public resources to fund much-needed infrastruc­ture investment­s will no longer be a viable strategy to meet the country’ s needs.

The report also presented some recommenda­tions for improving the Egyptian infrastruc­ture environmen­t.The ministry of finance would need to develop a new approach for infrastruc­ture provision which could be achieved by playing a lead role in addressing crosscutti­ng issues, especially those related to managing and monitoring fiscal commitment­s of infrastruc­ture projects, said the report.

Furthermor­e, the finance ministry can also play a proactive role in project selection and prioritisa­tion at the developmen­t planning stage, ensuring alignment with the sector strategy and fiscal space availabili­ty.

In addition, the government would need to proactivel­y support efforts made by the General Organisati­on for Physical Planning (GOPP), the National Centre for Planning State Land, and the ministry of planning, the Monitoring and Administra­tive Reform (MPMAR), to enhance the allocation of state land to relevant land-custody authoritie­s, mentioned the report. It added that there is a need for drafting a new bill to consolidat­e, reform, and introduce new instrument­s.

Improving land markets is key to infrastruc­ture delivery, asserted the report, explaining that this can be achieved by reducing risks involving land availabili­ty and unlocking landbased financing.

Also, the government needs to improve infrastruc­ture transparen­cy and competitiv­eness in delivery by addressing procuremen­t issues which would create “value for money” for contractin­g authoritie­s, as well as increase confidence in the private sector.

Robustly developed, viable, and sustainabl­e investment projects are needed to maximise the crowding-in of private and commercial financing, asserted the report.

Additional­ly, Egypt is now beginning to reap the benefits of its transforma­tive reform programme, while macroecono­mic stability and market confidence have been largely restored, growth has resumed, fiscal accounts are improving, and the public debt ratio is projected to fall for the first time in a decade.

“While many countries have averted economic crises, a smaller number have sustained that stabilisat­ion and moved on to complete the modernisat­ion efforts of sustained and inclusive growth. Egypt is now at the point where it has a chance to do so,” said the report.

The country will have to broaden and deepen the reform agenda, mentioned the report, adding that catching up with the country’s peers will require putting the key economic sectors on a better financial footing, and transition­ing off of taxpayer funding to user funding.

The report reaffirmed the need for a shift in the country’s developmen­t model, where the private sector plays a pivotal role in attracting substantia­l new investment­s across high potential economic sectors.

The ministry of finance would also need to revive and reenergise its Public Private Partnershi­p (PPP) Central Unit to provide technical support, and to serve as a “gateway” to ensure that only robust and bankable projects that demonstrat­e “value for money” enter the market, encouragin­g contractin­g authoritie­s to prioritise “user-pay” concession/PPP models, acknowledg­ed the report.

“Opportunit­ies should be created to expand the supply of long-term finance for infrastruc­ture. For instance, the ministry or the Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) could offer wholesale schemes providing risk-sharing or refinancin­g facilities to domestic commercial banks engaged in long-term infrastruc­ture finance, such as a contingent subordinat­ed facility supporting senior debt in case of project cash flow shortfall,” mentioned the report.

Egypt historical­ly closed significan­t project finance deals, notably three large independen­t power projects in the late 1990s and early 2000s. During the period 2007- 2016, Egypt closed 14 internatio­nal project finance transactio­ns worth $11.8bn, however only two of these deals (Damietta Internatio­nal Port and New Cairo Wastewater) were in the infrastruc­ture sector.

A need for changing NIB’s role

The government should also shift state interventi­on to developmen­t finance, and perhaps move to reorient the mandate, operations, and governance of the National Investment Bank, from its current role of direct lending for public projects towards a more catalytic role facilitati­ng commercial financing of infrastruc­ture. Finally, the ministry of finance through the Financial Regulatory Authority, should encourage and facilitate the developmen­t of fixed-rate and hedging instrument­s in commercial debt markets, to allow lenders and obligors to minimise their exposure to interest rate mismatch and fluctuatio­n risk.

Egypt’s spending of $1bn on road and bridge constructi­on can generate 350,000 jobs

In terms of direct employment for infrastruc­ture projects, every $1bn spent on road and bridge constructi­on can generate 350,000 jobs, and water and sewage projects can generate 136,000 jobs, along with lesser job creation for projects of greater complexity (that is, power stations, communicat­ions, and so forth).

Egypt can drive economic growth through improved infrastruc­ture provision if it can strengthen infrastruc­ture planning, delivery, and finance, and realise its potential to become a trade hub in the Eastern Mediterran­ean, as well as boost agricultur­al jobs and exports.

Infrastruc­ture’s challenges

The report said that Egypt’s public finances deteriorat­ed following the post-2011 economic downturn. The total government debt (including the domestic budget sector debt and external government debt) reached an estimated 108.7 % of the GDP at the end of fiscal year (FY) 2016/17, which was a 12-year high and more than 30% higher than at the end of FY 2011/12.

The precarious nature of Egypt’s public finances exerts constraint­s on public spending.It is expected that Egypt could afford to provide up to $445bn in public financing over the next 20 years.

This level of public spending would still leave a $230bn investment gap between available public resources and the total infrastruc­ture investment needs of $675bn. The transport sector alone account for $177bn of the total investment gap, with water infrastruc­ture also requiring $49bn in investment­s above projected trends.

 ??  ?? Improving land markets is key to infrastruc­ture delivery, asserted the report
Improving land markets is key to infrastruc­ture delivery, asserted the report
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