Egypt’s Economy Gathering Strength—IMF

September 26, 2017
imf-office

By Modupe Gbadeyanka

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has disclosed that the Egyptian economy “is gathering strength” after the country’s authorities embarked on an ambitious reform program and also taking “decisive measures aimed at restoring macroeconomic stability and sustainable public finances.”

In a statement issued on Tuesday, September 26, 2017, the IMF said the North African nation has so far been able to have a flexible exchange rate regime as well as reduced its budget deficit.

In addition, the global financial firm said Egyptian authorities have been able to also come up with energy subsidy reform, include women and youth to share the benefits of growth more broadly, and have higher growth through wide-ranging structural reforms.

Head of the team dealing with Egypt at the IMF, Subir Lall, noted that, “By strengthening social protection measures, they have sought to protect the most vulnerable.

“We have seen that economic activity has been gathering strength and efforts at reining in the budget deficit have begun to bear fruit. With the liberalization of the foreign exchange market, foreign currency shortages have disappeared.

“Looking ahead through the end of this year and into next year, the policy mix is also supportive of a decline in inflation from the high levels in the summer.”

Egypt launched a reform program when its economy faced rising imbalances that led to high public debt, a widening current account deficit, and declining official reserves.

To support the home-grown reforms, the government embarked in November 2016 on an IMF-supported program to restore the stability of its finances, promoted growth and employment, while shielding the poor from the adverse effects of the changes.

With the floating of the Egyptian pound, the foreign exchange market normalized, and the parallel market for foreign currency disappeared. The focus of monetary policy is to bring down inflation, which reached more than 30 percent since April, mainly due to the sharp depreciation of the pound and the impact of energy and tax reforms.

Also, Egypt adopted a value-added tax (VAT) as part of its reform program which aims to increase tax revenues sustainably. The government also took steps to reform expenditures, including notably energy subsidies. Resources from the higher VAT and more efficient spending will slow the accumulation of public debt, which had been rising rapidly.

In addition, government has taken bold steps to reduce energy subsidies which benefit mostly the rich, and also skew production to energy-intensive industries. The government reallocated part of the resources to social spending, including on health and education, and for targeted cash transfers.

Furthermore, government took measures to increase employment and labour force participation for women and youth. It has allocated budget resources to increase access to and the quality of public nurseries to help women join the labour force. It is also planning to improve the safety of public transportation. The government has also implemented specialized training programs and job search schemes for youth.

Recently, the parliament approved several measures to improve the business climate such as less red tape in industrial licensing, and easier access to financing for small and medium-sized enterprises. These measures should create more new jobs and help alleviate unemployment, which is particularly concentrated among women and young people.

According to the IMF, building on the ongoing reform efforts and the restoration of confidence, Egypt has the opportunity to transition to a higher growth trajectory, and increase prosperity for all, by locking in the gains from macroeconomic stabilization and harnessing its full growth potential.

Modupe Gbadeyanka

Modupe Gbadeyanka is a fast-rising journalist with Business Post Nigeria. Her passion for journalism is amazing. She is willing to learn more with a view to becoming one of the best pen-pushers in Nigeria. Her role models are the duo of CNN's Richard Quest and Christiane Amanpour.

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