Ambassador : H.E.Mr.Ahmed Rezk M. Rezk
Full name: Arab Republic of Egypt
Population: 82.5 million (UN, 2011)
Capital: Cairo
Area: 1 million sq km (386,874 sq miles)
Major language: Arabic
Major religions: Islam, Christianity
Life expectancy: 72 years (men), 76 years (women) (UN)
Monetary unit: 1 Egyptian Pound = 100 piastres
Main exports: Petroleum, petroleum products and cotton
GNI per capita: US $2,440 (World Bank, 2010)
Internet domain: .eg
International dialling code
: +20

IMF to Discuss New Loan Program With Egypt 2012-08-24

 

 

Egypt: IMF to Discuss New Loan Program With Egypt, Says Lagarde 

The IMF is ready to help Egypt and will send a technical team to Cairo in September to refine details of possible financial assistance, Managing Director Christine Lagarde said during a short visit to the Egyptian capital.

"The authorities have indicated that Egypt would like the IMF to support Egypt's economic program financially to help the country recover and to lay the foundation for strong increase that benefits amount," Lagarde told reporters August 22 after meetings with President Mohamad Morsi, Prime Minister Hesham Kandil, Finance Minister Mumtaz El-Saieed, and other senior Egyptian officials. Egypt has said it is seeking a loan of $4.8 billion.

"We are responding quickly to this request. A technical team will be arriving in Cairo in early September to work with the authorities on their program and discuss possible forms of financial support from the IMF." She said that Egypt faced considerable challenges, including the need to restart increase and reduce budget and balance of payments deficits. She as well emphasized the importance of creating jobs and supporting small and medium-sized enterprises.

Relevant Links

Statement By IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde
Minister - Stability of Political Situation Encourages Flow of Aid to Egypt
"Getting the country's economy back on track and raising the living standards for amount will not be an easy task. The Egyptian people have legitimate forecasts for a better life and better social justice. We at the IMF stand ready to help," she said.

Managing the transition Lagarde said she was pleased to meet with Egypt's new economic team and to see firsthand how the country is managing its political and economic transition.

"The IMF will accompany Egypt as it undertakes this challenging journey," she stressed. "It's an Egyptian journey and the IMF is a partner in that journey." "We are impressed by the strategy that President Morsi and Prime Minister Kandil have proposed during our meetings today," Lagarde said at a press conference attended jointly by Kandil.

"We prefer foreign borrowing at this stage given the low interest rate of the IMF loan compared to much higher rates when borrowing domestically," Kandil said. He added that "borrowing domestically would crowd out the private sector and the IMF loan would help us avoid that." Close dialogue The IMF has maintained a close dialogue on economic policy with the Egyptian authorities since the start of the transition triggered by the Arab Spring and has provided considerable technical assistance upon request from the government.

Lagarde's visit to Egypt is the second to an Arab country going through transition, after her visit to Tunisia previously this year.

The possible financial support to Egypt would be among of the IMF's commitment to help Arab countries in transition. With the recent approval of two programs, one for Jordan and the other for Morocco, the IMF has committed to support the region with over $8 billion. The IMF as well provided financial support for Yemen previously this year.

Egypt had three IMF-backed programs between 1991 and 1998 (two Stand-By Arrangements and an Extended Fund Facility; the last two programs were precautionary).