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Egypt
Half of Egypt's GDP originates in the public sector, most industrial
plants being owned by the government. Overregulation holds back technical
modernization and foreign investment. Even so, the economy grew rapidly
during the late 1970s and early 1980s, but in 1986 the collapse of world
oil prices and an increasingly heavy burden of debt servicing led Egypt
to begin negotiations with the IMF for balance-of-payments support. Egypt's
first IMF standby arrangement concluded in mid-1987 was suspended in early
1988 because of the government's failure to adopt promised reforms. Egypt
signed a follow-on program with the IMF and also negotiated a structural
adjustment loan with the World Bank in 1991. In 1991-93 the government
made solid progress on administrative reforms such as liberalizing exchange
and interest rates but resisted implementing major structural reforms like
streamlining the public sector. As a result, the economy has not gained
momentum and unemployment has become a growing problem. Egypt probably
will continue making uneven progress in implementing the successor programs
with the IMF and World Bank it signed onto in late 1993. Tourism has plunged
since 1992 because of sporadic attacks by Islamic extremists on tourist
groups. President MUBARAK has cited population growth as the main cause
of the country's economic troubles. The addition of about 1.2 million people
a year to the already huge population of 62 million exerts enormous pressure
on the 5% of the land area available for agriculture along the Nile.
GDP - purchasing power parity - $151.5 billion (1997 est.)
-
National product real growth rate:
-
National product per capita:
-
Inflation rate (consumer prices):
$19.4 billion, including capital expenditures of $3.8 billion (1997
est.)
$3.1 billion (f.o.b., 1997 est.)
crude oil and petroleum products, cotton yarn, raw cotton, textiles,
metal products, chemicals
$11.2 billion (c.i.f., 1997 est.)
machinery and equipment, foods, fertilizers, wood products, durable
consumer goods, capital goods
$31.2 billion (1997 est.)
growth rate 2.7% (FY92/93 est.)
textiles, food processing, tourism, chemicals, petroleum, construction,
cement, metals
cotton, rice, corn, wheat, beans, fruit, vegetables; cattle, water
buffalo, sheep, goats; annual fish catch about 140,000 metric tons
a transit point for Southwest Asian and Southeast Asian heroin and
opium moving to Europe and the US; popular transit stop for Nigerian couriers;
large domestic consumption of hashish from Lebanon and Syria
US commitments, including Ex-Im (FY70-89), $15.7 billion; Western (non-US)
countries, ODA and OOF bilateral commitments (1970-88), $10.1 billion;
OPEC bilateral aid (1979-89), $2.9 billion; Communist countries (1970-89),
$2.4 billion
1 Egyptian pound (#E) = 100 piasters
Egyptian pounds (#E) per US$1 - 3.4 (November 1994), 3.369 (November
1993), 3.345 (November 1992), 2.7072 (1990); market rate: 3.3920 (January
1995), 3.3920 (1994), 3.3704 (1993), 3.3300 (1992), 2.0000 (1991), 1.1000
(1990)
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