Egypt Delays IMF Loan Decision, Gulf Aid Helps Reform: Deputy PM

Egypt has postponed any decision on taking a $4.8 billion loan from the IMF as financial aid from Gulf states has given Cairo some breathing space as it starts to conduct economic reforms, Deputy Prime Minister Ziad Bahaa El-Din said on Tuesday.

Bahaa El-Din said Egypt has so far received around $8 billion of a $12 billion aid package from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and the United Arab Emirates promised in July, days after the army toppled Islamist President Mohamed Morsi.

The International Monetary Fund and Egypt have sporadically discussed a possible loan worth up to $4.8 billion to help the ailing economy since a 2011 uprising that toppled president Hosni Mubarak drove away tourists and foreign investors, two main sources of foreign currency.

Any IMF deal, however, would require economic reform commitments that the government might find politically risky.

“We have postponed that (IMF) decision for the time being. We are not under the extreme stress that the previous government found itself in,” Bahaa El-Din told a conference in London.

“The assistance that we have from abroad … This is money that has come at the right time to give us the breathing space to begin to implement those decisions at the pace and in conditions that are much more favorable than when you are pressed to have to sign an agreement today or tomorrow.”

Bahaa El-Din said Egypt was expecting to receive $1 billion in aid from Kuwait but did not say when the cash could arrive.

Some $3 billion out of total $5 billion aid from the UAE will be channelled through infrastructure and utility projects.

He said Egypt is negotiating for more aid from the Gulf which has so far given the country cash transfers and oil shipments. On top of $8 billion, Egypt’s central bank has received deposits from the Gulf to improve liquidity.

“Now we all understand and appreciate that this is not a sustainable situation, we are not going to rely every year on getting this kind of money,” Bahaa El-Din said.

“But it also comes to fill the gap that I have to assume is also non-recurrent.”

The minister told Reuters later that he has also signed a $610 million aid package in total from the World Bank to help build a power plant and develop sewage.

A central bank official told Reuters on Tuesday that Egypt returned $500 million to Qatar on Dec. 2 after Qatar refused to renew the deposit it had made with the central bank.

Qatar was one of the few Arab states to support Egypt during President Mohamed Morsi’s year in office but ties have deteriorated since July.

About a dozen Egyptians who oppose the interim government backed by army chief General Abdel Fattah al-Sissi protested outside the Egyptian Cultural Office in central London where the briefing was held.

After the briefing, they shouted “shame on you” to the participants, carrying banners that said “Sisi is a murderer” or a symbol adopted by Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood supporters after July.

RELAXING CONTROLS

Bahaa El-Din also said the government was in favour of relaxing capital controls imposed after the 2011 uprising. Capital controls help stabilise the currency but deter foreign investment Egypt badly needs.

“Capital controls are not something a country likes to implement. It was imposed under very exceptional circumstances,” he said.

“It’s a function of where we are … But you have the assurance of this government those capital controls will be relaxed as soon as possible. Some relaxations will be introduced by early next year.”

The central bank has limited Egyptians from transferring more than a cumulative $100,000 out of the country since the 2011 uprising unless they can demonstrate a pressing need for the funds. Many wealthier Egyptians have reached their limit and are no longer able to send funds abroad.

Depositors at banks can only withdraw a maximum of $10,000 in foreign currency per day under central bank rules, but in practice many banks restrict such withdrawals to much less and demand documents proving why the client needs the funds.

Source: Reuters

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