Categories
-Top News

IMF okays $3 billion loan to Egypt

Some Egyptian economists considered the approved IMF loan “a certificate of confidence” in the Egyptian economy…reports Asian Lite News

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has said that its executive board had approved a loan to Egypt of about $3 billion over 46 months.

The decision enables an immediate disbursement of about $347 million to Egypt, “which will help meet the balance of payments need and provide support to the budget”, the IMF said in a statement, adding the loan package is expected to encourage Egypt’s international and regional partners to provide an extra 14 billion dollars to finance the most populous Arab country, Xinhua news agency reported.

According to the IMF, the financial support was granted in exchange for an economic reform program from the Egyptian government, which it hopes can pave the way for “sustainable, inclusive and private-sector-led growth”.

The US-based finance institution has also asked Egypt to make “a permanent shift to a flexible exchange rate regime,” ensure the “downward trajectory in public-debt-to-GDP”, reduce “the state footprint”, “facilitate private-sector-led growth” and more.

The IMF’s loan comes at a time when Egypt is suffering high inflation and foreign currency shortage after the Russia-Ukraine crisis prompted capital flight from emerging markets.

Egypt’s annual urban consumer inflation rate rose from 16.2 per cent in October to 18.7 per cent in November, marking the highest increase since December 2017 when it reached 21.9 per cent, according to official data.

Some Egyptian economists considered the approved IMF loan “a certificate of confidence” in the Egyptian economy.

“The international business community has been waiting for this certificate of confidence, as the IMF will be evaluating and reviewing Egypt’s economic and structural reform program biannually for the coming four years,” Fakhri al-Fiqi, an Egyptian economic professor and head of the parliamentary planning and budget committee, told the news agency.

Al-Fiqi explained that the IMF support package, along with the anticipated additional $14 billion from other partners, will make up for the hot money withdrawal and the foreign currency shortage and eventually contain inflation.

“The inflation is expected to gradually slow down over the coming four years to 4-5 per cent as it used to be, in which case it will be affordable to average Egyptian citizens,” the expert told the news agency.

Egypt carried out a three-year economic reform program that started in late 2016 with the support of a $12-billion loan from the IMF.

ALSO READ-Pakistan-IMF talks kick off in Doha

Categories
-Top News Arab News UAE News

US needs to ‘reorient, not rupture’ ties with Saudi

Biden’s first meeting with the Saudi Crown Prince had become the most awaited moment of the trip with US officials constantly confronted with questions about it…reports Asian Lite News

US President Joe Biden ended Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salmans “pariah” status with a fist-bump when they met for the first time in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on Friday.

Biden switched to a full handshake with King Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, putting the fist-bump in perspective.

Biden’s first meeting with MSB, as the crown prince is popularly known, has become the most anticipated moment of his first visit to West Asia (Middle East), which took him first to Israel and Palestine and then Saudi Arabia, an ally that has been put on ice by the Biden administration over MSB’s role in the killing of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi dissident who lived and worked in the US.

As a candidate for the White House, Biden had famously vowed to turn Saudi Arabia into a global “pariah” for the Khashoggi murder.

That all ended on Friday.

Pictures of the fist-bump and MBS receiving the American leader were promptly put out by the Saudi government keen to demonstrate the Crown Prince’s repaired relationship with the US.

But Biden could raise the killing in his meetings with the Saudis.

“I have never been quiet about talking about human rights,” Biden said at a press conference in Israel. When pressed, he said that he always brings up human rights, but said that his “position on Khashoggi is so clear — if anyone doesn’t understand it in Saudi Arabia or anywhere else, they haven’t been around for a while.”

Biden’s first meeting with the Saudi Crown Prince had become the most awaited moment of the trip with US officials constantly confronted with questions about it.

The American leader had also faced severe criticism for agreeing to visit Saudi Arabia and meeting the Crown Prince. He pushed back in an OpEd in The Washington Post, saying, “I know that there are many who disagree with my decision to travel to Saudi Arabia. My views on human rights are clear and long-standing, and fundamental freedoms are always on the agenda when I travel abroad, as they will be during this trip, just as they will be in Israel and the West Bank.”

He had added: “From the start, my aim was to reorient but not rupture relations with a country that’s been a strategic partner for 80 years.”

Biden will start his Saudi visit with bilateral meetings with Saudi officials, one of which is underway now. He will have bilateral engagements Saturday with the leadership of Egypt, the UAE, and Iraq, and then participate in the GCC+3 Summit. He is expected to deliver a major policy speech at the summit on his vision and strategy for West Asia.

Biden’ intent for the trip is on “ensuring that there is not a vacuum in the Middle East for China and Russia to fill”, US National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan told reports on the way to Jeddah, adding, “American leadership and an American engagement will be a feature of US policy in this region, and that we intend to play a critical role in this strategically vital region on an ongoing basis.”

ALSO READ-At West Bank, Biden stands by two-state solution