IMF approves $2.77 billion to help Egypt with virus fallout
By Associated Press
May 11, 2020 1:50 PM CDT
FILE - In this June 19, 2019 file photo, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi speaks during a press conference in Bucharest, Romania. Amnesty International says that journalism in Egypt has effectively become a crime over the past four years, as authorities clamp down on media outlets and muzzle...   (Associated Press)

CAIRO (AP) — The International Monetary Fund has agreed to lend Egypt $2.77 billion in emergency assistance to deal with the economic fallout caused by the coronavirus pandemic, its executive board said Monday.

Egyptian government officials had requested a one-year bailout loan package last month, as the historic economic shutdown takes a heavy toll on the Arab world’s most populous country.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has drastically disrupted people’s lives, livelihoods, and economic conditions in Egypt … resulting in an urgent balance of payments need,” said Geoffrey Okamoto, First Deputy Managing Director and acting Chair of the IMF.

Although Egypt, which has recorded 9,746 COVID-19 infections and 533 deaths, has not yet seen an outbreak on the scale of the one sweeping the U.S. and Europe, its case count is rising and critical sources of income are vanishing.

Tourism, which accounts for some 12% of Egypt’s gross domestic product, has ground to a halt. Remittances from Egyptian workers abroad, another 10% of GDP, have dropped and the global downturn jeopardizes revenue from the Suez Canal. Schools, mosques, museums and the country’s famed archeological sites have been shuttered. Restaurants, bars, theaters and shops close nightly.

One in three Egyptians were already living in poverty before the outbreak, according to government figures.

Prime Minister Mustafa Madbouly had described the loan as a way to protect foreign currency reserves and hard-won gains over years of significant economic reforms and austerity measures.

Egypt secured a $12 billion bailout package from the IMF in 2016 in exchange for floating the currency, slashing key subsidies and imposing a value-added tax. The painful steps won President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi praise from Cairo’s western backers and bankers. But the policies have squeezed the poor and middle class.

In its statement on Monday, the IMF said that even with the loan, Egypt needs a boost from multilateral and bilateral creditors to close its payment gap and bring the economy back from the edge.

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