Egypt targets 7.2% deficit, 6% GDP growth, 6.163tn total GDP in FY 2019/20

Mohamed Samir
9 Min Read

Egypt’s draft budget for fiscal year (FY) 2019/20 budget was sent to the House of Representative on Sunday, for approval.

The ambitious draft budget was approved by the cabinet last week, targeting a total gross domestic product (GDP) of EGP 6.163tn ($355.9136bn), and a GDP growth of 6%.

The draft budget must be approved by parliament and ratified by the president before the start of the FY, which begins in July.

Daily News Egypt took a dive into the draft budget for FY 2018/19, which suggests that the government is looking to tighten its finances and push ahead with fiscal reforms, which signals stable economic conditions in the most populous Arab country.

The deficit question

The new budget targets a deficit of 7.2% of the GDP, down from 8.4% in the current budget, and 9.8% in FY’s 2017/18 budget, and includes EGP 445.1bn in new borrowings.

According to the draft budget, total public expenditure amounted to about EGP 1.574tn, compared to EGP 1.424tn in the budget of the current FY, marking a 10.5% growth.

While revenues amounted to 1.134tn, growing by 14.7% in year-over-year (y-o-y) terms, with tax collection rising 13% y-o-y to EGP 856.6bn and other earnings up 30% to EGP 277.8 bn.

On the other hand, wages and compensation of employees allocation rose by 11.4% to record EGP 301bn, up from EGP 270bn, including the recent modifications to public wages issued by President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi,  such as the increasing the minimum wage from EGP 1,200 to EGP 2,000. While expenditures on the purchases of goods and services increased by 23.3% to EGP 74bn.

Debt, subsidies, interest

In the draft budget, the interest bill on government debt continued to increase, but at a slower pace than in the past two and a half years.

In FY 2019/20 budget, EGP 569bn are allocated for debt services payments, marking a 5% y-o-y growth.
Debt services’ benefits account for 36.1% of government spending in the next FY, but less than this year, at about 39%. The new budget sets the average interest rates for T-bills and T-bonds at

The new draft budget sets the price of Brent crude at $70 per barrel, up from $67 per barrel in the current FY. In the 2017/18 budget, the price of an oil barrel globally was set at $55.

Egypt is highly vulnerable to crude oil price fluctuations, as each $1 increase in the Brent crude’s price would cost the state EGP 4bn, according to the finance ministry.

Moreover, the government targets achieving a primary budget surplus of 2%, in FY 2019/20.

The draft budget included other expenses, such as allocations for the armed forces, which amounted to EGP 90.4bn in the coming FY, marking a growth of 19.5% y-o-y.

Government, total investments

According to the draft budget, government investments increased by 42.2% to record EGP 211bn, of which EGP 140bn are investments financed by the state treasury.
While the total investments are speculated at EGP 1.17tn in FY 2019/20, accounting for almost 18.6% of the country’s total GDP.

Furthermore, the new budget targets an unemployment rate of 9%. Egypt’s current unemployment stands at 8.9%, according to the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS).

Remarkably, the FY 2019/20 budget allocates EGP 3.9bn for social housing.

A slew of IPOs to boost revenues

A flurry of governmental companies’ initial public offerings (IPOs) is expected by analysts to boost the country’s revenues and decrease the budget deficit towards the announced targets in the draft budget.

The government is studying listing stakes in eight to 10 state-owned companies for IPOs before the end of 2019, most probably in the last quarter of the year, the Minister of the Public Enterprise Sector, Hesham Tawfik, told Daily News Egypt earlier.

The first stage of the government’s IPO programme was announced in March 2018 with the aim of strengthening the Egyptian capital market and attracting more liquidity to the EGX.

However, it was postponed in October 2018 due to the emerging markets crisis and the global market volatility.

The programme will also see shares offered in Alexandria Container and Cargo Handling Company, Abu Qir Fertilisers and Chemicals Industries Company, and Heliopolis Company for Housing and Development.

Tawfik informed Daily News Egypt that the authorities target EGP 16bn from the Abu Qir Fertilisers, and Alexandria Containers’ stake offering.

In March, Tawfik announced the resumption of a programme to sell stakes in state-owned Egyptian companies by offering 4.5% of shares of Eastern Tobacco Company on the Egyptian Exchange (EGX).

“The private placement has been snatched by Arab and institutional investors, who accounted for almost 85% of the shares offered, while foreign investors acquired the other stake,” a senior company source told Daily News Egypt.

The public offering of the company started on Sunday 3 March, and ended on 5 March, the minister added. Tawfik stated that the private placement accounted for 95% of the total offered shares.

The Chemical Industries Holding Company announced the offering of 4.5% of the shares of the Eastern Company to the stock market, with 95% in a private offering, and 5% for public offering.

The government announced in September 2018 that it is working on a programme to offer shares of dozens of its companies over the next three to five years in sectors such as oil, services, chemicals, shipping, marine services and real estate, to help support the state’s public finances.

The last public offering of state-owned companies was in 2005 when shares of Telecom Egypt, AMOC and Sidi Kerir Petrochemicals Company were sold.

The buzz around IPOs in Egypt is growing louder, with more companies announcing plans for sales of shares.

They join a growing line-up in what could prove the busiest year for new listings in Cairo since the 2011 uprising that ousted President Hosni Mubarak.

Mansour Kamel, an economic analyst and adviser to the former Minister of Investment Mahmoud Mohie El-Din, said, “the IPO programme will positively impact the budget, as it will provide revenues that will be used to bridge the deficit, but it is only a transitional measure that the state should not rely upon as a permanent means to solve the [deficit] — especially considering that the government has selected a list of the most successful companies out there.”

The state owns vast swathes of Egypt’s economy, including three of its largest banks—the National Bank of Egypt, Banque du Caire, and United Bank of Egypt—along with much of its oil industry and real estate sector.

The last time state-owned companies were listed on the exchange was in 2005, when shares of Telecom Egypt, the state’s landline monopoly, and oil companies: Sidi Kerir Petrochemicals Co and Alexandria Mineral Oils Co were floated.

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Mohamed Samir Khedr is an economic and political journalist, analyst, and editor specializing in geopolitical conflicts in the Middle East, Africa, and the Eastern Mediterranean. For the past decade, he has covered Egypt's and the MENA region's financial, business, and geopolitical updates. Currently, he is the Executive Editor of the Daily News Egypt, where he leads a team of journalists in producing high-quality, in-depth reporting and analysis on the region's most pressing issues. His work has been featured in leading international publications. Samir is a highly respected expert on the Middle East and Africa, and his insights are regularly sought by policymakers, academics, and business leaders. He is a passionate advocate for independent journalism and a strong believer in the power of storytelling to inform and inspire. Twitter: https://twitter.com/Moh_S_Khedr LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mohamed-samir-khedr/