Arab Times

Egypt trade gap to narrow $11-12 bln in 2016

Govt aims to double exports in five years

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CAIRO, Oct 24, (RTRS): Egypt expects to cut its trade deficit by $11$12 billion in 2016 as part of efforts to ease an acute dollar shortage and is encouragin­g domestic industries to fill the void as imports plummet, Trade and Industry Minister Tarek Kabil said.

Speaking as part of the Reuters Middle East Investment Summit, Kabil said Egypt had produced about $4 billion worth of import substitute­s since the start of the year and aimed to grow domestic industry by 8 percent in three years.

“If you look at last month’s report, industry grew by almost 20 percent, because it has to fill the gap of the imports. Some of (the imports) are unnecessar­y and some is real consumptio­n that Egyptian industry has to fill the gap for,” he said in an interview at his wood-panelled offices in Cairo.

He said local companies were producing substitute­s primarily in food industries, but also building materials, chemicals, leather and furniture.

Egypt has struggled to overcome a crippling dollar shortage since the 2011 uprising caused foreign investors and tourists, key earners of foreign exchange, to flee.

The shortage is exacerbate­d by a severe trade imbalance — Egypt imported $67 billion worth of goods in 2015 but exported just $18.5 billion, according to trade ministry data.

Aimed

Central bank governor Tarek Amer said in January Egypt aimed to cut its import bill by 25 percent to ease dollar demand.

Egypt has this year raised customs tariffs on luxury goods, plugged customs loopholes, and tightened quality controls.

Together with dollar rationing and capital controls that have made it difficult for merchants to obtain enough foreign exchange to pay for cargoes, the measures have curbed imports.

Prices of imported goods have soared as merchants are forced to source their dollars on the black market for as much as 15.5 pounds per dollar, a wide spread over the official rate of 8.8 pounds. Some imported goods have become scarce.

Kabil said the trade deficit had narrowed by $8 billion in the first nine months of this year, with imports falling $7 billion but exports — key to bringing more dollars into the economy — rising by only $1 billion.

The minister, a former PepsiCo executive, said low labour costs would help keep manufactur­ers competitiv­e as Egypt seeks to double its exports in the next five years.

Egypt has created an export developmen­t agency to market Egyptian products abroad, Kabil said. It is focusing on Africa, where Egypt has a competitiv­e as well as geographic­al advantage. The aim is to increase exports to Africa from $4 billion now to $8 billion five years, or 20 percent per year, he said.

 ??  ?? Constructi­on laborers work on a pedestrian bridge over the 2 mile (3.2 kms), Dubai Canal in Dubai, United Arab Emirates on Oct 24. Water has been released to the canal as a part of a testing phase of the AED 2 billion, about
$548 million, project that...
Constructi­on laborers work on a pedestrian bridge over the 2 mile (3.2 kms), Dubai Canal in Dubai, United Arab Emirates on Oct 24. Water has been released to the canal as a part of a testing phase of the AED 2 billion, about $548 million, project that...

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