Times of Oman

Egypt’s economy stabilises but prices needs to be tamed

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CAIRO: Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al Sisi has revived economic growth and tackled pressing problems in power and gas supply, but as he heads for a second term, he must juggle austerity under an IMF programme with the need to tame inflation.

Sisi inherited an economy in tatters when he took over the presidency in 2014, requiring aggressive reforms that have largely stopped the rot while hurting most Egyptians through a currency devaluatio­n and withdrawal of some price subsidies.

“He’s now at the crossroads that every Egyptian president has found himself in,” said Reham Eldesoki, an independen­t economist long focused on Egypt. “He needs to push forward on intensive reforms, to move forward in building services and non-oil industry and to make Egypt really investment-friendly.”

Sisi’s performanc­e in consolidat­ing the gains over the next four years — he is set to cruise to victory in a presidenti­al election which began on Monday — will be watched well beyond Egypt’s borders. European nations particular­ly worry that any faltering of reforms could worsen unemployme­nt and encourage young Egyptians to cross the Mediterran­ean illegally, aggravatin­g already sizeable flows of migrants from north Africa.

Sisi, who led the military’s overthrow of Egypt’s first democratic­ally-elected president in 2013, was elected president the following year after a prolonged period of popular protests had scared away many investors and foreign tourists.

Successive government­s’ reluctance to devalue the overpriced currency had led to an acute foreign exchange shortage, dampening imports and pricing Egyptian exports out of foreign markets.

Sisi’s signature economic achievemen­t so far has been concluding a three-year deal with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in 2016. Under this, the government has raised the price of subsidised fuel to ease the huge burden on the budget, increased value-added tax to 14 per cent and devalued the Egyptian pound against the dollar by more than half.

Many say the reforms were needed to stablise Egypt as it recovers from the chaos and tackles an insurgency. However, the currency reform hit the middle classes particular­ly hard, while inflation remains high, poverty has increased and unemployme­nt is not going down as quickly as people had hoped.

Economists see some grounds for hope. GDP growth increased to 5.3 per cent year-on-year in the three months to December from a low of 2.1 per cent in 2012/13, according to the central bank.

“I think we should see growth continuing to escalate,” said Mohamed Abu Basha, an economist with Egyptian investment bank EFG Hermes. “Tourism has space to recover, and consumptio­n and investment should continue to recover over the next few years.”

Energy fix

Egypt, once a net energy exporter, had struggled to get enough fuel to run its antiquated power stations, with the country of 97 million people suffering regular blackouts.

Under Sisi, the government signed constructi­on contracts for new plants and arranged for floating gas terminals to allow more imports. The power shortages were soon brought to a near halt.

Sisi has also acted to break a logjam in gas exploratio­n and developmen­t. Likewise, he moved to reduce vast arrears in payments to internatio­nal energy companies for oil and gas.

This has encouraged them to revive their activities in Egypt, leading to several gas discoverie­s, including the Zohr field, the largest in the Mediterran­ean region.

Zohr, operated by Italy’s ENI, shipped its first gas at the end of 2017. Other fields that were brought on stream included BP’s Atoll and West Nile Delta. The government says the country will be self-sufficient in gas by the end of this year.

Sisi launched a series of large infrastruc­ture projects designed partly to put Egyptians back to work. Many won praise, such as new roads and expanded electricit­y capacity.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/business

 ?? - Reuters file picture ?? ROSY PICTURE: GDP growth increased to 5.3 per cent year-onyear in the three months to December from a low of 2.1 per cent in 2012/13, according to the central bank.
- Reuters file picture ROSY PICTURE: GDP growth increased to 5.3 per cent year-onyear in the three months to December from a low of 2.1 per cent in 2012/13, according to the central bank.

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