David Goldman has an update about the Egyptian economy.
Things are getting worse.
Last June,
the government claimed to have 4.7 million tonnes of wheat, or six
months’ supply. It appears that Egypt has been running on reserves and
failing to replenish stockpiles, mainly because the country remains
desperately short of foreign exchange. A chronic shortage of diesel fuel
and electricity, as well as shortages of vaccines for children, has
plagued the Egyptian economy for the past year. The butane cylinders
with which most Egyptians cook are in short supply, and the black market
price has risen to ten times the subsidized official price. Egypt is
billions of dollars in arrears to suppliers of diesel, butane,
foodstuffs and other essential imports.
The fuel shortage has worsened the food shortage, because farmers
can’t obtain enough diesel to run irrigation pumps and agricultural
equipment, al-Arabiya
reported last October 8. The extent of the damage to this year’s
harvest is hard to estimate but seems substantial, according to the
newspaper.
The latest central bank data for foreign exchange reserves suggest
that Egypt is running on fumes. The country’s trade deficit has risen to
about $3 billion a month, and its foreign exchange earnings from
tourism, the Suez canal and workers’ remittances amount to $1 to $1.5
billion a month, leaving a monthly hole of $1 to $1.5 billion. Cash
reserves were at $7.7 billion in October, the central bank reported this
week, essentially unchanged from $7.63 billion in September, after $1
billion in new loans from Qatar and Turkey, Reuters reported:
Egypt in October received $500 million from Qatar and
another $500 million from Turkey, state-run al-Gomhuria newspaper said
on Monday quoting an unnamed central bank official.
It was the second such payment from Qatar, which has promised to
deposit a total $2 billion with Egypt’s central bank by the end of the
year.
Egypt drew $600 million from reserves during the month to pay for
petroleum imports and $100 million to repay foreign loans, the newspaper
quoted the official as saying.
The $1 billion of loans in October evidently failed to cover Egypt’s
import needs; although liquid reserves remained stable (at barely two
months’ coverage of the trade deficit) the country continued to burn
through stockpiles of wheat, and failed to import enough diesel and
butane to run the economy. Turkey is running a current account deficit
of between 8% and 10% of GDP and still owes money to the IMF, while
Qatar’s total foreign exchange reserves of $20 billion are barely
sufficient to fund Egypt for a year. Saudi Arabia refuses to lend money
to the Muslim Brotherhood regime in Cairo because the Muslim Brotherhood
wants to overthrow the Arab monarchies of the Sunni world. The Obama
administration proposed $1 billion in emergency US aid (a lot less in
terms of actual folding money) but it seems unlikely that the
Republican-controlled House of Representatives will approve even this
pittance.
And you wonder why the US State Department wants to ignore the Middle East and focus on Asia?
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