Short of Money, Egypt Sees Crisis on Fuel and Food - United States officials warn of disaster unless Egypt soon carries out a package of tax increases and subsidy cuts tied to a $4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund. “They are operating on the notion that Egypt is too big to be allowed to fail, that the U.S. and the West will step in.”
From The New York Times:
Egypt is running out of the hard currency it needs for fuel imports. The shortage is raising questions about Egypt’s ability to keep importing wheat that is essential to subsidized bread supplies, stirring fears of an economic catastrophe at a time when the government is already struggling to quell violent protests by its political rivals.
Independent analysts say that the growing shortage of fuel and the fear about wheat imports now pose the gravest threats to Egypt’s fragile stability. “It has the potential to make things very, very bad,” said Yasser el-Shimy, an analyst for the International Crisis Group.
Egypt is running out of the hard currency it needs for fuel imports. The shortage is raising questions about Egypt’s ability to keep importing wheat that is essential to subsidized bread supplies, stirring fears of an economic catastrophe at a time when the government is already struggling to quell violent protests by its political rivals.
United States officials warn of disaster unless Egypt
soon carries out a package of tax increases and subsidy cuts tied to a
$4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund. That would persuade
other lenders that Egypt was creditworthy enough to obtain billions more in
additional loans needed to meet its yawning deficit. But fearful of a public
reaction at a time when the streets are already near boiling, the government of
President Mohamed Morsi has so far resisted an I.M.F. deal, insisting that Egypt
can wait.
Independent analysts say that the growing shortage of fuel and the fear about wheat imports now pose the gravest threats to Egypt’s fragile stability. “It has the potential to make things very, very bad,” said Yasser el-Shimy, an analyst for the International Crisis Group.
Egypt has held two years of unsuccessful talks with
the I.M.F., and the current government is still balking at the politically
painful package of overhauls — even as rising prices and unemployment make those
measures more difficult with each passing day.
“They are operating on the notion that Egypt is too
big to be allowed to fail, that the U.S. and the West will step in,” Mr. Shimy
said. “They think Egypt has a right to get the loan, and I think they will
probably keep pushing all the way.”
Energy subsidies make up as much as 30 percent of
Egypt’s government spending, said Ragui Assaad, of the Economic Research Forum
here. The country imports much of its fuel, and for the first time last year it
was forced to import some of the natural gas used to generate electricity — the
reason for the recent blackouts. Egypt also imports about 75 percent of its
wheat, mixing the superior foreign wheat with lower-quality domestic supplies to
improve its subsidized bread.
[T]he two years of mayhem in the streets since the
ouster of Mr. Mubarak have decimated tourism and foreign investment, crippling
the economy. The government’s reserve of hard currency has fallen to about $13
billion from $36 billion two years ago.
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