Quote of the day

“I find economics increasingly satisfactory, and I think I am rather good at it.”– John Maynard Keynes

Saturday 9 March 2024

Egypt has plenty to offer for essays on LEDCs

 BRIEFING

TOURISM, WHICH BROUGHT IN £14BN LAST YEAR, HAS COLLAPSED

The slow-motion collapse of Egypt

The country of 110 million people is in economic dire straits, but it’s also in a strategically crucial region that is already aflame. Egypt is simply too big to fail. Simon Wilson reports

WHAT’S HAPPENING?

Fears are growing over the slow-motion collapse of Egypt’s economy, and the possible knock-on effects on the Middle East and wider region, including Europe. For decades, Egypt has been a chronic underperformer, with a sclerotic economy dominated by state interests – in particular by those of the country’s all-powerful military. But in recent years things have taken a sharp turn for the worse. President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the ex-general who took power in a 2013 coup and assumed the presidency the following year, has proved a disastrous economic manager. Rather than dismantle the military’s long-standing chokehold over the economy, Sisi has reinforced it – and gone on a debt-fuelled spending splurge on prestige mega-projects that the country can’t afford. Egypt was already badly hit by the sharp rise in food prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. And now the conflict in Gaza, and its spillover into the Red Sea – restricting access to the Suez Canal – has made things even worse. 

IN WHAT WAY?

Tourism brought in about $14bn last year, accounting for 14% of dollar inflows, but has collapsed since the start of the Gaza war, on Egypt’s northeastern border, in October. The Suez Canal normally accounts for about 30% of container-ship traffic, and earns Egypt almost $10bn a year – but the attacks on shipping by the Houthi rebels who control much of western Yemen have cut traffic by about half. In addition, Egypt is home to the eastern Mediterranean’s only two gas liquefaction facilities, where it processes and re-exports gas from Israel’s southern gas fields. But those re-exports have fallen 50% as a result of war-related disruption. Egypt, already struggling with an influx of 450,000 Sudanese refugees since conflict re-erupted in its southern neighbour ten months ago, is now facing a second humanitarian crisis on its doorstep, and the possibility of more than a million Palestinian refugees. Another big source of income – remittances home from Egypt’s large diaspora – is drying up due to fears over transferring money into the country’s tanking currency, the Egyptian pound. Foreign investors are also withdrawing capital, or demanding ever higher interest rates. 

“PUBLIC DEBT IS OVER 90% OF GDP AND 60% OF THE NATIONAL BUDGET GOES ON SERVICING IT”

WHAT ARE THE FIGURES?

The Egyptian pound has been devalued three times since early 2022, losing 70% of its value. And that’s if you value it at the official exchange rate of 30-31 pounds per dollar in the formal banking sector, where the supply of foreign currency is minimal. In reality, a parallel market has emerged, with the pound more than halving again, to about 70 per dollar. The plunging currency helped push inflation to an annual rate of 34% in December, up from 6% two years ago. Over the past decade, fiscal deficits have averaged 9.5% of GDP. As such, the government has accumulated a massive public debt of more than 90% of GDP. And with the currency in free fall, it now spends 60% of the national budget servicing it. External debt, including IMF credit, rose from an average of $40bn in the early 2010s to $130bn by 2020, including nearly 70% in long-term debt. Since then it has risen further, to around $160bn, and debt repayment obligations are forecast to reach $29bn this year, or 8% of GDP. 

WHAT ARE THEY SPENDING IT ALL ON?

The “mightiest and most obscene” of Sisi’s grand projects is the new capital being built in the desert east of Cairo, says Steven Cook in Foreign Policy. With work still in its first phase, some $60bn has already been spent, but planned financing from the UAE and China has been pulled. Other costly projects include a new “summer capital” on the north coast, a nuclear-power plant (in a country with excess electricity), a new “sustainable” city in the Nile delta, and the revival of a wildly ambitious Mubarak-era project, known as Toshka, that would in effect create a second Nile valley by diverting water using canals. What the projects have in common is that they are all of dubious economic value, but are politically important. “The message may have been that Egypt can still do great things,” says Cook. But they’ve become “unsustainable burdens on the country.”     

HOW IS EGYPT STAYING AFLOAT?

For the time being, the Egyptian economy and government are being propped up by a mix of new loans from allies in the UAE and Saudi Arabia, and repeated IMF bailouts; it’s now the fund’s second-biggest debtor. Two weeks ago, Abu Dhabi stepped in with $35bn of investment, a sum that should help secure further IMF support. In the long term, the country’s prospects depend on cutting the role of the state and bureaucracy, controlling the public finances, and building on its growing sectors – such as agricultural, herbal and horticulture businesses, building materials, garments and light manufactured goods, and information technology. In the short run, it needs to kick-start economic reforms by devaluing its currency formally, says The Economist. But to do so would see its dollar debts surge relative to GDP, and raise the price of food, especially grains, where Egypt relies on imports. 

WHAT SHOULD THE GOVERNMENT DO?

Ideally, restructure its debts, live within its means and get the army out of business. But there’s no sign that Sisi, who was re-elected in an unfree and unfair election in December, has any intention of doing so. And indeed, “such austerity would be highly dangerous”, says The Economist – raising the prospect of years of default, mass unrest and violence. Egypt’s problems are “threatening to tip it over the edge”, and losing it diplomatic clout to the likes of the UAE and Qatar. But the same problems are, paradoxically, “increasing its negotiating power” when it comes to attracting outside help. When so much of the Middle East is aflame, a major nation of 110 million people, in such a strategically crucial location, is simply too big to fail. “So the world should hold its nose and bail Egypt out again.” 

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