Kerry
in Egypt as enforcer
U.S.
offers Egypt budget aid after Mursi assurance on economic reforms
3
March, 2013
CAIRO
— The United States said on Sunday it would give Egypt $250 million
in budget aid after Egyptian President Mohamed Mursi promised to take
the painful economic reforms needed to secure an IMF loan.
U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry announced the funding after meeting
Mursi and acknowledged Egypt's "extreme needs" as the
Islamist government struggles with a slide in currency reserves to
worryingly low levels and a soaring budget deficit.
Cairo
says it wants to reopen talks with the International Monetary Fund on
a $4.8 billion loan which was agreed in principle last November but
suspended at Cairo's request due to violent street protests the
following month.
"In
light of Egypt's extreme needs and President Mursi's assurance that
he plans to complete the IMF process, today I advised him the United
States will now provide the first $190 million of our pledged $450
million in budget support funds," Kerry said in a statement at
the end of a visit to Cairo.
The
$190 million is part of a $1 billion pledge by U.S. President Barack
Obama in 2011 after Egypt's popular uprising.
Kerry
also said the United States would release $60 million for an
Egyptian-American Enterprise Fund, which is designed to support small
and medium companies in the private sector.
However,
the U.S. diplomat hinted further aid will depend on Egypt carrying
out both economic and political reforms.
"The
United States can and wants to do more," he said. "When
Egypt takes the difficult steps to strengthen its economy and build
political unity and justice, we will work with our Congress at home
on additional support."
A
spur to reform
Kerry
described the funds as "a good-faith effort to spur reform and
help the Egyptian people at this difficult time". On Saturday he
said it was "paramount, essential, urgent" that the economy
get back on its feet.
However,
the sum is dwarfed by the budget deficit, which is growing rapidly as
a slide in the Egyptian pound pushes up the cost of subsidizing
energy and food, much of which has to be imported using scarce
dollars.
In
a reform program which Egypt is sending to the IMF, the government
targeted a deficit for this financial year of 189.7 billion Egyptian
pounds ($28 billion) or 10.9 percent of economic output. Even this
assumes economic reforms are made, and the deficit would hit 12.3
percent of GDP without such action, it forecast.
Egypt's
political and economic turmoil has frightened away foreign investors
and many tourists - a major source of the foreign currency it needs
to pay for wheat and fuel imports.
Two
years after the fall of Hosni Mubarak, Egypt is deeply split between
the ruling Islamists and the leftist and liberal opposition parties,
most of which have announced they will boycott parliamentary
elections due to start next month.
On
Sunday, a Cairo appeals court ordered that a politically fraught
retrial of Mubarak, his sons and top aides should begin on April 23,
nine days before the elections are due to begin.
Mubarak,
the first Arab ruler to be tried by his people after the uprisings
that swept the Middle East and North Africa, was jailed for life for
ordering the killing of demonstrators in 2011, but was granted a
retrial by a Cairo court in January.
As
Kerry completed his visit, protesters and security forces clashed in
Cairo's Tahrir Square, center of the revolution, as police tried to
clear demonstrators and open the square to traffic, a witness said.
Unidentified
assailants set fire to a police vehicle outside the nearby Egyptian
Museum, where the treasures of Ancient Egypt are on display, the
state news agency MENA reported.
Hundreds
of people were also injured in the Suez Canal city of Port Said
during clashes between police and protesters there, security and
medical sources said.
Egypt's
armed forces said on its Facebook page one military officer was
wounded when he was shot in the leg and one soldier from the security
forces was killed when he was shot in the neck by "unknown
elements".
April
IMF deal?
Finance
Minister Al-Mursi Al-Sayed Hegazy was optimistic that an IMF
agreement could be sealed before the four-stage lower house poll gets
under way on April 22. "I expect and am hopeful this deal can be
made before the elections," he told reporters.
Economists
are divided between those who see such a timetable as over-optimistic
and those that believe Egypt cannot hold out much longer without
help.
Reserve
figures due out this week are expected to show a continuing slide
further below $15 billion - the amount needed to fund three months'
imports, economists said.
However,
the price of any deal is likely to be high. Egypt is sending
projections to the IMF of huge increases in gasoline and diesel
prices as it comes under pressure to curb soaring energy subsidies, a
cabinet official said on Sunday.
The
government plans to continue subsidized fuel prices for the most
needy, under a rationing system to be implemented in July. However,
Egyptians excluded from this scheme would face a jump in prices that
could provoke public fury if implemented.
The
official, who is part of the cabinet's economic team, told Reuters
the increases would be put to an IMF team once it arrives in Cairo to
negotiate the loan. "The new prices are included in the economic
reform program that will be presented to the IMF mission," said
the official, who requested anonymity.
Petroleum
Minister Osama Kamal was quoted by the state news agency MENA as
describing the figures as estimates and said that no decisions had
yet been made. According to the projections, the commonly used 90
octane gasoline would leap to 5.71 Egyptian pounds ($0.85) a liter
from 1.75, while diesel would go up to 5.21 pounds from 1.10.
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