Egypt Economic Monitor, Spring 2015 : Paving the Way to a Sustained Recovery

Egypt’s economic activity is gaining momentum. Growth accelerated to 5.6 percent during the first half of FY15, compared to a dismal 1.2 percent in the same period last year. The recent spike in economic activity reflects favorable base effects, bu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2015
Subjects:
TAX
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24581301/egypt-economic-monitor-paving-way-sustained-recovery-spring-2015
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22071
id okr-10986-22071
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic LIVING STANDARDS
TARIFFS
TERRORISM
CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
PLEDGES
MONETARY POLICY
DEFICIT
WITHDRAWAL
DEPOSIT
DEBT ACCUMULATION
HOLDING
BASIS POINTS
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
OIL PRICE
DEPOSITS
BROAD MONEY
FINANCIAL MARKET PARTICIPANTS
REAL INTEREST RATES
STOCK
CORPORATE TAX RATE
INTEREST
PUBLIC INVESTMENTS
GUARANTEES
DEBT STOCK
INTEREST RATE
REMITTANCE
PRIVATE CREDIT
EXCHANGE
GOVERNMENT REVENUES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS
DISCOUNT RATE
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
LIQUIDITY
REPAYMENTS
REAL INTEREST
BLACK MARKET
SHARES OF INVESTMENTS
REVENUES
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
CAPACITY BUILDING
DISCOUNT
ASSET BASE
CAPITAL STOCK
TAX
NON-PERFORMING LOANS
CASH TRANSFER
INCOME TAX
BANKRUPTCY
BENEFICIARIES
GOVERNMENT GUARANTEES
INFLATION
ASSET RATIO
DISPUTE RESOLUTION
SAFETY NETS
BUDGET
GOVERNMENT SAVING
MARKET PARTICIPANTS
CENTRAL BANK
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
LABOR MARKET
TRADE BALANCE
SOVEREIGN GUARANTEES
OIL PRICES
INVESTMENT SPENDING
T-BILL RATES
CURRENCY
IMMUNIZATION
CAPITAL GAINS
PORTFOLIOS
CORPORATE TAX RATES
DEBTS
CONTRACTS
INFLATIONARY PRESSURES
TAX REGIME
INTEREST RATES
FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE
MARKETS
DEBT
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
INFLATION RATE
SETTLEMENT
PUBLIC FINANCE
BUDGET DEFICIT
DOMESTIC DEBT
LOANS
DIRECT INVESTMENT
RESERVES
DEBT SERVICE
RULE OF LAW
CASH TRANSFERS
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
COMMODITY PRICE
FINANCE
FOREIGN CURRENCY
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
TAXES
BANKING SECTOR
FISCAL DEFICIT
EXPENDITURE
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
AUCTIONS
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
PREPAYMENTS
EQUITY
INCOME TAXES
NATIONAL SECURITY
INVESTORS
INTEREST PAYMENTS
TAX RATE
GOVERNMENT BUDGET
TRANSPARENCY
PRIVATE SECTOR CREDIT
DOMESTIC LIQUIDITY
MARKET CONDITIONS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
MARKET PRICES
FUTURE
FOREIGN INFLOWS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
RETURNS
FISCAL BURDEN
TREASURY BILLS
SHORT-TERM DEBT
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE
SAFETY NET
STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS
NATIONAL INVESTMENT
REPAYMENT
DISBURSEMENTS
EXPENDITURES
ISSUANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
TAX RATES
T-BILL
SHARES
MARKET
POLITICAL UNCERTAINTY
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
SECURITIES
TREASURY
INFLATION RATES
CURRENCIES
GOVERNMENT DEBT
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
INVESTOR
GOODS
SECURITY
FINANCIAL MARKET
INVESTMENT
OUTSTANDING DEBT
SHARE
TAX SYSTEM
POVERTY
DEBT OBLIGATIONS
OUTSTANDING DEBTS
PRIVATE INVESTORS
DEBT REPAYMENTS
REVENUE
PRIVATE INVESTMENTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
PROFIT
INVESTMENTS
TAX TREATMENT
LENDING
GOVERNMENT LENDING
MATURITIES
EXCHANGE RATE
RISK AVERSION
REMITTANCES
PUBLIC SPENDING
PROFITS
LIABILITIES
INTEREST RATES ON TREASURY BILLS
ARREARS
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
DEVELOPMENT BANK
DEBT RELIEF
spellingShingle LIVING STANDARDS
TARIFFS
TERRORISM
CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
PLEDGES
MONETARY POLICY
DEFICIT
WITHDRAWAL
DEPOSIT
DEBT ACCUMULATION
HOLDING
BASIS POINTS
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES
OIL PRICE
DEPOSITS
BROAD MONEY
FINANCIAL MARKET PARTICIPANTS
REAL INTEREST RATES
STOCK
CORPORATE TAX RATE
INTEREST
PUBLIC INVESTMENTS
GUARANTEES
DEBT STOCK
INTEREST RATE
REMITTANCE
PRIVATE CREDIT
EXCHANGE
GOVERNMENT REVENUES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS
DISCOUNT RATE
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
LIQUIDITY
REPAYMENTS
REAL INTEREST
BLACK MARKET
SHARES OF INVESTMENTS
REVENUES
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
CAPACITY BUILDING
DISCOUNT
ASSET BASE
CAPITAL STOCK
TAX
NON-PERFORMING LOANS
CASH TRANSFER
INCOME TAX
BANKRUPTCY
BENEFICIARIES
GOVERNMENT GUARANTEES
INFLATION
ASSET RATIO
DISPUTE RESOLUTION
SAFETY NETS
BUDGET
GOVERNMENT SAVING
MARKET PARTICIPANTS
CENTRAL BANK
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
LABOR MARKET
TRADE BALANCE
SOVEREIGN GUARANTEES
OIL PRICES
INVESTMENT SPENDING
T-BILL RATES
CURRENCY
IMMUNIZATION
CAPITAL GAINS
PORTFOLIOS
CORPORATE TAX RATES
DEBTS
CONTRACTS
INFLATIONARY PRESSURES
TAX REGIME
INTEREST RATES
FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE
MARKETS
DEBT
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
INFLATION RATE
SETTLEMENT
PUBLIC FINANCE
BUDGET DEFICIT
DOMESTIC DEBT
LOANS
DIRECT INVESTMENT
RESERVES
DEBT SERVICE
RULE OF LAW
CASH TRANSFERS
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
COMMODITY PRICE
FINANCE
FOREIGN CURRENCY
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
TAXES
BANKING SECTOR
FISCAL DEFICIT
EXPENDITURE
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
AUCTIONS
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
PREPAYMENTS
EQUITY
INCOME TAXES
NATIONAL SECURITY
INVESTORS
INTEREST PAYMENTS
TAX RATE
GOVERNMENT BUDGET
TRANSPARENCY
PRIVATE SECTOR CREDIT
DOMESTIC LIQUIDITY
MARKET CONDITIONS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
MARKET PRICES
FUTURE
FOREIGN INFLOWS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
RETURNS
FISCAL BURDEN
TREASURY BILLS
SHORT-TERM DEBT
GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE
SAFETY NET
STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS
NATIONAL INVESTMENT
REPAYMENT
DISBURSEMENTS
EXPENDITURES
ISSUANCE
CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT
TAX RATES
T-BILL
SHARES
MARKET
POLITICAL UNCERTAINTY
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
SECURITIES
TREASURY
INFLATION RATES
CURRENCIES
GOVERNMENT DEBT
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS
INVESTOR
GOODS
SECURITY
FINANCIAL MARKET
INVESTMENT
OUTSTANDING DEBT
SHARE
TAX SYSTEM
POVERTY
DEBT OBLIGATIONS
OUTSTANDING DEBTS
PRIVATE INVESTORS
DEBT REPAYMENTS
REVENUE
PRIVATE INVESTMENTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
PROFIT
INVESTMENTS
TAX TREATMENT
LENDING
GOVERNMENT LENDING
MATURITIES
EXCHANGE RATE
RISK AVERSION
REMITTANCES
PUBLIC SPENDING
PROFITS
LIABILITIES
INTEREST RATES ON TREASURY BILLS
ARREARS
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
DEVELOPMENT BANK
DEBT RELIEF
World Bank
Egypt Economic Monitor, Spring 2015 : Paving the Way to a Sustained Recovery
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Egypt, Arab Republic of
description Egypt’s economic activity is gaining momentum. Growth accelerated to 5.6 percent during the first half of FY15, compared to a dismal 1.2 percent in the same period last year. The recent spike in economic activity reflects favorable base effects, but more importantly broad-based sector recovery, especially in tourism and manufacturing. On the demand side, growth continues to benefit from resilient consumption and government stimulus, supported by large financial inflows from Gulf States. In March 2015, Egypt held a high level Economic Development Conference, which culminated with the signing of sizeable investment deals worth US$36 billion, securing external financing worth US$24 billion, and the announcement of a new Gulf support package worth US$12.5 billion. This will boost the ongoing economic recovery and facilitate efforts to achieve macroeconomic stability. Annual growth is expected to double to 4.3 percent in FY15, and should increase further thereafter, compared to the muted growth of 2 percent during FY11-FY14. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) conducted its article four consultation in November 2014 and the final report generally commended the authorities’ medium term plans while highlighting some risks including slippage in implementing reforms and a large external financing gap. Egypt’s main risk is to sustain the ongoing economic recovery which requires improved security. Notwithstanding the authorities’ ambitious fiscal consolidation plan, the deficit and debt aggregates will remain high and unsustainable. Further, there are risks of policy slippage as some details and the exact timing of policy measures are still missing and implementation capacity remains a challenge. Further, sustaining the reform pace requires efficient and well-targeted safety nets, which might take time to build. Finally, there is significant uncertainty regarding the financing of the announced mega-projects and the potential contingent liabilities that may arise.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Egypt Economic Monitor, Spring 2015 : Paving the Way to a Sustained Recovery
title_short Egypt Economic Monitor, Spring 2015 : Paving the Way to a Sustained Recovery
title_full Egypt Economic Monitor, Spring 2015 : Paving the Way to a Sustained Recovery
title_fullStr Egypt Economic Monitor, Spring 2015 : Paving the Way to a Sustained Recovery
title_full_unstemmed Egypt Economic Monitor, Spring 2015 : Paving the Way to a Sustained Recovery
title_sort egypt economic monitor, spring 2015 : paving the way to a sustained recovery
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2015
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24581301/egypt-economic-monitor-paving-way-sustained-recovery-spring-2015
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22071
_version_ 1764449996193660928
spelling okr-10986-220712021-04-23T14:04:06Z Egypt Economic Monitor, Spring 2015 : Paving the Way to a Sustained Recovery World Bank LIVING STANDARDS TARIFFS TERRORISM CONTINGENT LIABILITIES PLEDGES MONETARY POLICY DEFICIT WITHDRAWAL DEPOSIT DEBT ACCUMULATION HOLDING BASIS POINTS GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES OIL PRICE DEPOSITS BROAD MONEY FINANCIAL MARKET PARTICIPANTS REAL INTEREST RATES STOCK CORPORATE TAX RATE INTEREST PUBLIC INVESTMENTS GUARANTEES DEBT STOCK INTEREST RATE REMITTANCE PRIVATE CREDIT EXCHANGE GOVERNMENT REVENUES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS DISCOUNT RATE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS LIQUIDITY REPAYMENTS REAL INTEREST BLACK MARKET SHARES OF INVESTMENTS REVENUES CAPITAL ADEQUACY CAPACITY BUILDING DISCOUNT ASSET BASE CAPITAL STOCK TAX NON-PERFORMING LOANS CASH TRANSFER INCOME TAX BANKRUPTCY BENEFICIARIES GOVERNMENT GUARANTEES INFLATION ASSET RATIO DISPUTE RESOLUTION SAFETY NETS BUDGET GOVERNMENT SAVING MARKET PARTICIPANTS CENTRAL BANK MACROECONOMIC STABILITY LABOR MARKET TRADE BALANCE SOVEREIGN GUARANTEES OIL PRICES INVESTMENT SPENDING T-BILL RATES CURRENCY IMMUNIZATION CAPITAL GAINS PORTFOLIOS CORPORATE TAX RATES DEBTS CONTRACTS INFLATIONARY PRESSURES TAX REGIME INTEREST RATES FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE MARKETS DEBT PRIVATE INVESTMENT HOUSEHOLD INCOME INFLATION RATE SETTLEMENT PUBLIC FINANCE BUDGET DEFICIT DOMESTIC DEBT LOANS DIRECT INVESTMENT RESERVES DEBT SERVICE RULE OF LAW CASH TRANSFERS LEGAL FRAMEWORK COMMODITY PRICE FINANCE FOREIGN CURRENCY PUBLIC INVESTMENT TAXES BANKING SECTOR FISCAL DEFICIT EXPENDITURE GOVERNMENT SECURITIES AUCTIONS INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS PREPAYMENTS EQUITY INCOME TAXES NATIONAL SECURITY INVESTORS INTEREST PAYMENTS TAX RATE GOVERNMENT BUDGET TRANSPARENCY PRIVATE SECTOR CREDIT DOMESTIC LIQUIDITY MARKET CONDITIONS FINANCIAL CRISIS MARKET PRICES FUTURE FOREIGN INFLOWS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT RETURNS FISCAL BURDEN TREASURY BILLS SHORT-TERM DEBT GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE SAFETY NET STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS NATIONAL INVESTMENT REPAYMENT DISBURSEMENTS EXPENDITURES ISSUANCE CURRENT ACCOUNT DEFICIT TAX RATES T-BILL SHARES MARKET POLITICAL UNCERTAINTY FOREIGN EXCHANGE SECURITIES TREASURY INFLATION RATES CURRENCIES GOVERNMENT DEBT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENTS INVESTOR GOODS SECURITY FINANCIAL MARKET INVESTMENT OUTSTANDING DEBT SHARE TAX SYSTEM POVERTY DEBT OBLIGATIONS OUTSTANDING DEBTS PRIVATE INVESTORS DEBT REPAYMENTS REVENUE PRIVATE INVESTMENTS EXTERNAL DEBT PROFIT INVESTMENTS TAX TREATMENT LENDING GOVERNMENT LENDING MATURITIES EXCHANGE RATE RISK AVERSION REMITTANCES PUBLIC SPENDING PROFITS LIABILITIES INTEREST RATES ON TREASURY BILLS ARREARS INTERNATIONAL MARKETS DEVELOPMENT BANK DEBT RELIEF Egypt’s economic activity is gaining momentum. Growth accelerated to 5.6 percent during the first half of FY15, compared to a dismal 1.2 percent in the same period last year. The recent spike in economic activity reflects favorable base effects, but more importantly broad-based sector recovery, especially in tourism and manufacturing. On the demand side, growth continues to benefit from resilient consumption and government stimulus, supported by large financial inflows from Gulf States. In March 2015, Egypt held a high level Economic Development Conference, which culminated with the signing of sizeable investment deals worth US$36 billion, securing external financing worth US$24 billion, and the announcement of a new Gulf support package worth US$12.5 billion. This will boost the ongoing economic recovery and facilitate efforts to achieve macroeconomic stability. Annual growth is expected to double to 4.3 percent in FY15, and should increase further thereafter, compared to the muted growth of 2 percent during FY11-FY14. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) conducted its article four consultation in November 2014 and the final report generally commended the authorities’ medium term plans while highlighting some risks including slippage in implementing reforms and a large external financing gap. Egypt’s main risk is to sustain the ongoing economic recovery which requires improved security. Notwithstanding the authorities’ ambitious fiscal consolidation plan, the deficit and debt aggregates will remain high and unsustainable. Further, there are risks of policy slippage as some details and the exact timing of policy measures are still missing and implementation capacity remains a challenge. Further, sustaining the reform pace requires efficient and well-targeted safety nets, which might take time to build. Finally, there is significant uncertainty regarding the financing of the announced mega-projects and the potential contingent liabilities that may arise. 2015-06-25T18:55:21Z 2015-06-25T18:55:21Z 2015-04 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24581301/egypt-economic-monitor-paving-way-sustained-recovery-spring-2015 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22071 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Economic Updates and Modeling Middle East and North Africa Egypt, Arab Republic of