Home Middle East Egypt IMF grants Egypt initial approval of $1.2bn on fourth review Egypt, grappling with high inflation and shortages of foreign currency, agreed to the $8bn, 46-month facility in March by Neesha Salian December 26, 2024 On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund said it reached a staff-level agreement with Egypt on the fourth review under its extended fund facility arrangement, potentially unlocking a $1.2bn disbursement under the programme. Egypt, grappling with high inflation and shortages of foreign currency, agreed to the $8bn, 46-month facility in March. A sharp decline in Suez Canal revenue caused by regional tensions over the last year compounded its economic woes. The IMF said Egypt’s government had agreed to increase its tax-to-revenue ratio by 2 per cent of gross domestic product over the next two years, with a focus on eliminating exemptions rather than increasing taxes. This would give it space to increase social spending to help vulnerable groups, the IMF said in a statement. “While the authorities’ plans to streamline and simplify the tax system are commendable, further reforms will be needed to enhance domestic revenue mobilization efforts,” the IMF statement said. Egypt to drive private sector growth Egypt had agreed to make more decisive efforts to ensure the private sector became the main engine of growth and to sustain its commitment to a flexible exchange rate, the IMF statement added. The staff-level agreement of the fourth review must still be approved by the IMF‘s executive board. Read: Egypt’s Suez Canal Economic Zone set for rapid expansion, CEO says Tags Egypt finance IMF loan You might also like CBUAE maintains 4% GDP growth forecast for 2024, 4.5% for 2025 DP World issues MENA region’s first $100m blue bond AD Ports Group awards construction contract for new terminal in Egypt CBUAE drops interest rates by 25 basis points, reflects US Fed move