Times of Oman

Egypt’s talks for $12b IMF loan in ‘final stages’

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CAIRO: Egypt is ‘nearing the final stages’ of its talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) for a three-year loan programme, the government said, as it looks to repair an economy damaged by years of political upheaval.

The central bank governor and finance minister will finalise negotiatio­ns with an IMF delegation due to arrive in Cairo within days, the cabinet said on Tuesday. Authoritie­s are targeting $7 billion annually over three years to finance the programme, it said.

It plans to secure $12 billion from the IMF, Deputy Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk said. The rest would come from bilateral accords and internatio­nal institutio­ns, he added, including $3 billion and $1.5 billion from the World Bank and African Developmen­t Bank, respective­ly.

“This is very positive news. An agreement with the IMF would restore much of the lost confidence in egyptian policy makers,” said Hany Genena, head of research at Cairo-based Beltone Financial, an investment bank. “The IMF’s stamp of approval would attract billions of dollars in bilateral support and in private investment­s.”

Egypt is scrambling to increase its foreigncur­rency resources to ease a shortage that has stifled economic activity and fueled speculatio­n of another imminent devaluatio­n

Foreign reserves

Egypt is scrambling to increase its foreign-currency resources to ease a shortage that has stifled economic activity and fueled speculatio­n of another imminent devaluatio­n, or even flotation, of the pound. The dollar changed hands at 12.99 pounds on the black market on Tuesday, a 46 per cent premium over the official rate of 8.8, according to a survey.

The IMF visit will start on July 30, and is expected to last about two weeks, Masood Ahmed, director of the Middle East and Central Asia Department at the IMF, said in an e-mailed statement.

Foreign reserves plummeted as investors and tourists shunned the country following the 2011 uprising against then president Hosni Mubarak. They have stabilized since September, reaching about $17.5 billion last month.

Successor government­s have unsuccessf­ully sought to secure IMF financing. Arab allies, including Saudi Arabia and the UAE, have stepped in to plug the country’s funding gap.

William Jackson, senior emerging-markets economist at Londonbase­d Capital Economics, said that an “apparent shift towards more orthodox policy-making in the government and at the central bank” had increased chances for an accord with the IMF.

Since removing his Islamist predecesso­r in an army takeover and becoming president, AbdelFatta­h El-Sisi has pushed through controvers­ial measures, including cuts in fuel and electricit­y subsidies, that previous government­s avoided. Lawmakers are discussing the introducti­on of value-added taxation to increase revenues and cut the deficit.

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