Times of Oman

Egypt’s annual inflation reaches 31.5% in April

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CAIRO: Egypt’s annual urban consumer-price inflation hit a three-decade high in April, adding pressure on the government to lower prices before the holy month of Ramadan begins at the end of the month.

Food demand usually grows during Ramadan because of heavy consumptio­n following the dawnto-dusk fasting. Ramadan begins on May 27.

Annual urban inflation rose in April to 31.5 per cent from 30.9 per cent in March, the official statistics agency, CAPMAS, said on Wednesday. The figures are the highest since June 30, 1986, when it reached 35.1 per cent, according to Reuters data.

President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi is under increasing pressure to revive the economy, keep prices under control and create jobs to avoid a backlash from the public.

President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi is under increasing pressure to revive the economy, keep prices under control and create jobs to avoid a backlash from the public. Egypt abandoned its currency peg to the US dollar on November 3.

Currency depreciati­on

Import-dependent Egypt abandoned its currency peg to the US dollar on November 3, and since then the currency has depreciate­d roughly by half, causing prices of goods to soar.

Floating the pound helped Egypt secure a $12 billion Internatio­nal Monetary Fund loan to support the country’s economic reforms, which include subsidy cuts and introducin­g a value-added tax.

An IMF delegation is in Cairo to review Egypt’s progress with the reforms, a condition for disbursing the second installmen­t of the loan programme.

Jihad Azour, the new head of the IMF’s Middle East department, said earlier this month that lower- ing inflation is key to keeping the country’s economic reform program on track .

Egypt’s central bank raised interest rates 3 per cent when it floated the pound in November, in an effort to fight price pressures. But inflation is expected to keep rising as the government pushes on with more economic reforms.

The central bank left rates unchanged at its last four monetary policy meetings, but bankers and economists say more rate increases are likely as inflationa­ry pressures rise with the implementa­tion of reforms. The central bank’s monetary policy committee is due to meet on May 21 to discuss interest rates.

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