The Sunday Guardian

In eGypt, weddinGs Get Costlier

-

CAIRO: Nadia Mohammad Salem started saving up for her wedding long before she got engaged. But getting married proved far more stressful than she’d imagined when her husband proposed a year ago.

The number of marriages across Egypt fell by nearly 3% in 2017, according to official data, and a lot of that appears to be down to rising costs.

“Things were very expensive,” said Nadia, 30. “I was feeling nervous and concerned.”

Tough economic reforms including a devaluatio­n of the country’s pound in late 2016 have led to a dramatic increase in prices, notably for the imported goods bought by many newly-weds to equip their homes. “All of the necessitie­s that come with getting married are going to be more expensive,” said Rania Salem, assistant professor at the University of Toronto’s sociology department. “Therefore I would expect people to stay in the single state or engagement period longer and longer.” In 2012, the average cost of a wedding was 61,000 Egyptian pounds, Salem said. Back then the currency traded at around 6.15 to the dollar, compared with nearly 18 now. This year, Nadia spent around 80,000 pounds ($4,500) on just her “gehaz”—the kitchen equipment and other items a bride purchases ahead of her marriage. Despite help from her family, she had to save up for years. On their wedding day in November, she and her husband had a small celebratio­n on the street rather than a formal party.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India