The National - News

REFORMS IN EGYPT OPEN THE DOOR TO NEW INVESTMENT ECONOMY

▶ Expansion in the private sector is paying off as companies come aboard to build strong foundation­s

- SARAH TOWNSEND

Ongoing reforms by Egypt to help boost growth and reduce inflation are bearing fruit, with foreign companies increasing their investment in Africa’s third-largest economy and helping it attract newcomers.

“I can see the success of our reforms when I look at the global business rankings,” Sahar Nasr, Egypt’s minister for investment and internatio­nal co-operation, told The National at the Africa 2018 conference in Sharm El Sheikh, backed by Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah El Sisi.

“The number of new companies being establishe­d, the fact that our existing investors from Asia, Europe, the US – including Samsung, Uber, Coca-Cola – are increasing their investment­s here, while new ones are coming in.”

Egypt, North Africa’s largest economy, sustained major setbacks as a result of political turmoil, with its economy slowing, capital outflows increasing and inflation skyrocketi­ng.

However, the country has turned a page, with Mr El Sisi ushering in political stability and the economy has improved with the country adhering to an economic reform programme backed by a $12 billion loan from the IMF since late 2016.

Under the programme, the country made substantil­a cuts to energy subsidies, introduced new taxes and devalued its currency.

Economic growth in the 201718 fiscal year that ended in June reached 5.4 per cent, up from 4.2 per cent a year earlier. The government is targeting growth of up to 8 per cent for the 2021-22 fiscal year.

In the past two years, Egypt introduced at least 10 pieces of legislatio­n intended to expand the private sector and boost economic growth.

The new laws relate to investment, companies, bankruptcy and legislatio­n that regulates the ride-hailing app Uber’s services in the country, ratified in May.

Other reforms to strengthen the business environmen­t include tax incentives, reduced bureaucrac­y and an investor centre – a one-stop shop to simplify the process of establishi­ng a company.

The measures have helped to prop up Egypt’s standing as a business-friendly environmen­t. The country rose eight places to 120th in the World Bank’s 2019 Ease of Doing Business index, published last month.

In September, IMF managing director Christine Lagarde said Egypt’s economy is “showing strong signs of recovery”, and that its economic growth was the highest in the Middle East, at a projected 5.3 per cent for 2018, rising to 5.5 per cent next year.

Having completed the “first phase of Egypt’s transforma­tion” with new laws and regulation­s, the country is now focusing on introducin­g those changes, increasing foreign investment and building human capital at home, Ms Nasr said.

Forming public-private-partnershi­ps which can attract investment for infrastruc­ture projects driven by a large economy and growing population is a key element of this, she added.

“In the beginning, when there was no investment law, the government had to step in and build these projects itself, but now we have a lot of [internatio­nal finance institutio­ns] who are very much interested in financing them, meaning our partnershi­ps are not limited to the borrowing associated with external debts,” Ms Nasr said.

The World Bank’s private sector arm, the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n, is helping to build the $2.8bn Benban solar energy plant, touted to be the biggest solar farm in the world and expected to open next year.

Egypt is seeking more foreign investors to develop its roads, highways, energy infrastruc­ture and railways – in which there has been “limited investment in recent years”, according to the minister.

On Saturday, Egypt secured a loan of $135 million from the Kuwait Fund for Arab Developmen­t to help finance the constructi­on of four water desalinati­on plants.

Egypt’s share of global foreign direct investment has risen 15 per cent in the past year since the reforms were introduced, and the number of new private sector businesses establishe­d in Egypt has risen 29 per cent in the year to date, Ms Nasr said.

Fostering the creation of start-ups is crucial for Egypt, which has relatively high, albeit falling, levels of youth unemployme­nt at about 10 per cent.

“Our priority is creating jobs for young people and we know that the main job creators are small, young firms – the ‘gazelles’, the innovators, the disruptors,” Ms Nasr said.

During the Africa 2018 event, the IFC launched a white paper on how to create an enabling environmen­t for “transforma­tional entreprene­urship” – the type of activity that has the capacity to transcend borders, build supply chains and create new private sector jobs.

This is opposed to “subsistenc­e entreprene­urship”, where businesses are primarily concerned with addressing a smaller, local need.

More sophistica­ted early stage funding, robust digital infrastruc­ture, bankruptcy and other laws to encourage risk-taking, and practical support to build managerial skills are all needed to boost the sector, the IFC said.

Our priority is creating jobs for young people and we know that the main job creators are small, young firms SAHAR NASR Egyptian investment minister

 ?? Reuters ?? A visitor uses virtual reality glasses at the Africa 2018 Forum
Reuters A visitor uses virtual reality glasses at the Africa 2018 Forum

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