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Egypt's Economy Suffers With Latest Outbreak Of Political Violence

Egypt Economy

By TAREK EL-TABLAWY   11/26/11 07:27 AM ET   AP

CAIRO -- Drivers passing Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo curse the protesters.

On radio shows, callers question whether the youth activists and others involved in the new wave of demonstrations over the past week are nationalists, selfish children or saboteurs.

Political differences aside, what has become clear is that the latest clamor against Egypt's military rulers is pummeling the country's already flailing economy at a crucial time when many hoped winter tourism would pick up. A financial crisis is looming, say analysts.

"We're not far off," said Neil Shearing, chief emerging markets economist with Capital Economics. "There's enough money left in the coffers to get through the year, but not much beyond that. Crunch time is two to three months away."

It took 30 years to engineer the revolution that ousted former President Hosni Mubarak in February. But it only took months to push the 7 percent annual growth rate of recent years to an anemic forecast of only about 1 percent this year.

The difficulties keep mounting. The stock market tanks daily and foreign reserves have fallen by almost 40 percent so far this year.

The drop is linked to the protests that have persisted since Mubarak's fall, and more specifically, the wide gap between the expectations of the population after the uprising and the reality of what the government could deliver.

From iconic Tahrir Square, the epicenter of the revolution, to the city's middle income neighborhoods and slums, the sobering realization that the hopes for democracy have not translated into a better standard of living is leaving Egyptians increasingly frustrated – with the military rulers, with the interim government that resigned a few days ago and, perhaps more troublingly, with each other.

"The move toward democracy is something that should be a beacon for the rest of the region," said Shearing. "But we've clearly reached a point ... where there needs to be some political stability because the financing risks are severe."

As of October, the country's net foreign reserves had fallen to $22 billion from $36 billion at the end of 2010. At least part of that money has gone to supporting the Egyptian pound, which economists worry could face severe depreciation if officials don't shore up the country's finances.

At the famed pyramids of Giza, when horse rides, papyrus prints and tours failed to entice some tourists, a young guide turned to the unorthodox.

"Girls?" offered 23-year-old Samir Adham, flashing a sly grin. "Hashish?"

He apologized when he realized the offer was made to a reporter.

"No one comes any more," he explained. "What can I do? I have to make a living," he said, bemoaning the hammering of Egypt's vital tourism industry, one of the country's top money-earners, since the revolution.

The troubles confronting Adham and others in the tourism sector are a window into the country's broader challenges.

Egypt's tourism sector has accounted for roughly 10 percent of gross domestic product and employs Egyptians in a range of supporting industries – from guides and camel touts to hotel workers and artisans.

"Most shops have either let go of most of their employees or cut their salaries by at least 50 percent," said Khaled Osman, who owns a shop near the pyramids employing about 20 people. Since the revolution, the unemployment rate has climbed to almost 12 percent in the third quarter of 2011, compared to just shy of 9 percent a year earlier.

If the uprising that pushed Mubarak from power marked the start of the industry's demise for the year, then the latest protests in Tahrir Square have further cemented the losses.

The most recent clashes began as protesters returned to the square calling for the military to hand over power immediately to a civilian government. Among their complaints was that the ruling generals were no different than Mubarak and that they had run the economy into the ground.

The images of activists and security forces hurling rocks at each other through a thick fog of tear gas is hardly encouraging tourists. The unrest hasn't sat well with investors either. The cost of government borrowing has gone up and the central bank on Friday was forced to raise interest rates for the first time in roughly three years.

Borrowing costs will likely climb even more after ratings agency Standard & Poor's on Thursday drove Egypt's sovereign debt rating deeper into junk status, citing what it said was "an ongoing high, and recently increased, risk of challenges to political institutions that will possibly involve further domestic conflict."

"These challenges could arise if populist demands for greater political participation are thwarted, or from demands for improved living standards from different sectors of the population no matter who is governing Egypt," the agency said.

The impact of the uncertainty is clear at Cairo's airport, where officials report that passenger traffic has fallen off sharply since the start of the latest clashes a week ago. Some flights arrive with fewer than 30 passengers.

In Luxor, home to some of the country's most prized archaeological sites, tourism officials said hotel occupancy rates have plunged to under 10 percent. The downturn there is especially troubling because the winter months are typically when tourists head to southern Egypt, and Luxor and Aswan rely overwhelmingly on tourism revenues.

The declines are mirrored in Cairo, where five-star hotels sit largely empty.

Only Red Sea resorts such as Hurghada and Sharm el-Sheik are still going strong, with occupancy rates of about 70 percent, according to Amani El-Torgoman, tourism operations manager at Travco, one of the region's largest travel companies. But even there, it has come at a price.

"We're running after clients with best offers and last minute offers," said El-Torgoman, noting that most properties had cut their rates by as much as 50 percent to lure in visitors with all-inclusive packages that can go for as little as $50 per night.

While the latest clashes in Cairo have yet to be reflected in tourism figures, officials expect the hit to be hard and to build on top of an already declining interest on the part of Europeans, the bulk of visitors.

Irina Tyurina, a spokesperson for the Russian Association of Tourist Agencies, said the sales had dropped by 57 percent over the past six months compared to the same period of last year.

The so-called "Classic tours," which involve trips through Cairo and then down to southern Egypt, are all but dead, said Travco's El-Torgoman.

"If things continue like this, there are a lot of people who will go out of business," she said. "A lot (of smaller companies and shops) can't afford paying the salaries or even sustaining small losses."

The same argument carries across other sectors of the economy and into the daily lives of Egyptians who complain that the only thing that has come from the ouster of Mubarak has been even more of an increase in prices, coupled with a surge in crime and the headaches that come with the daily protests in Cairo. Already nearly half the population of more than 80 million lives near or below the poverty line set by the World Bank of $2 a day.

"Why can't they see that they're destroying the country," railed Mohammed El-Sharkawy, an accountant who moonlights as an electrician to make ends meet. The activists say "they want democracy and freedom, but don't understand that it comes with responsibility."

> ____

> Associated Press correspondents Vladimir Isachenkov in Moscow, Nicole Winfield in Rome, Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin and Alexander Besant in Cairo contributed.

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CAIRO -- Drivers passing Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo curse the protesters. On radio shows, callers question whether the youth activists and others involved in the new wave of demonstrations over ...
CAIRO -- Drivers passing Tahrir Square in downtown Cairo curse the protesters. On radio shows, callers question whether the youth activists and others involved in the new wave of demonstrations over ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Peter007
08:21 AM on 11/27/2011
Someone claimed that when a large, world food producer shifted from producing food to producing energy from corn, it raised the prices of world food prices so that economic strife was created in places where the economies were already on the brink.
Higher food prices caused unrest and so began the Arab spring.

Fill 'er up with two bushels please.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
keedyk87
06:29 AM on 11/27/2011
Let's worry about the economy forget the people and their rights. Without money to eat what can one do? And the poor tourists that should be on everyone's mind. If they don't get to see the pyrimads they may die. I have always said people should always come in third place. Money and things to be concerned with first then you can worry about the Human Beings that create this money and these things. God created us to worship money and things which are more important than we are!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
structurequity
structurequity not oppression
05:25 AM on 11/27/2011
yuall think so?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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12:11 AM on 11/27/2011
the western obsession with economics has put the cart before the horse. would it be better to have a strong economy with a totalitarian govt? maybe according to the economist magazine but not to the people that make up the economy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charles Queen
I am a disabled nam vet
11:34 PM on 11/26/2011
Yep,all of that ruce and peace talks was just a bunch of hype by them.AS for anyone from this country that's in another country that decides it's time to go postal they realy need to get the heel out of said country"(s) or suffer the consequeces
11:25 PM on 11/26/2011
Always easy to tear down and destroy things. Building something on the other hand is quite difficult.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
robjh1
We Have Met the Enemy and he is Us: Pogo
07:08 PM on 11/26/2011
I remember during the fall of Egypt's government the pols told us that the country would immediately benefit after the old left. Many on HP criticized me for saying the country took take things slowly for there wasn't an infrastructure in place once Mubarck left. Now look.
05:29 PM on 11/26/2011
Now add a possible move to a "hard-line" Islamic form of Government and see how much further your A**es slid into the abyss! No Tourist (like me) means NO money for folks like you. Think you got it tough now just implement an Islamic form of Government and folks like me will not even fly over your Country.

We will see just how much All*h provides then!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blndgenie
As a matter of fact, I DID build that..
08:36 PM on 11/26/2011
Egypt was next on my list of travel, now its toast.............probably permanently. Their number 1 industry is tourism.......so the extremists will effectively destroy their economy completely and reduce it to a stoneage culture. Pity isn't it?
05:12 AM on 11/27/2011
I too was planning just such a trip but not anymore.
05:28 PM on 11/26/2011
The entire western banking structure is failing, and Egyptians blame the protesters. This is like blaming the spotted owl because nearly all the old growth timber had been harvested and logging jobs were disappearing.

The people want a say in how their country is run. The military wants stability and to keep it's economic perogatives. Neither has much to do with with the economic downturn. We have a global economic structure that is failing. The International Monetary Fund seems to setting itself up as the world bank that can dictate terms to individual countries.

The one upside is that Egypt is still dependant on us financially, at least their military is. This is a wedge that can be used to hasten the turnover to civilian gov't. At least it's possible.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cadawa
04:27 PM on 11/26/2011
Wait, wait. What happened this past week in Egypt, wasn't "political violence". It was a protest against the US supported rulling military junta whose US supported army started beating and killing people when they asssembled to voice their objections. And all this journalists is concerned about is Egypt's GDP?
03:19 PM on 11/26/2011
Egypt lost the ability to feed its own population around 1952 when the Army took over. Today Egypt imports half of its minimally required food allotment. In March its foreign currency reserves were USD$39 billion today it's about USD$12 billion. Money is flying out of the country. The Egyptian central bank is weeks from failure. This time next year Egypt will resemble Sudan and Somalia more than anything else.

These are simply facts so feel free to flag this post and scream personal insults at me. And don't forget to blame everyone but Egypt.
05:33 PM on 11/26/2011
But I agree! Now to add insult to injury just watch what will happen if they move to implement an Islamic form of Governance. Folks like me will not even fly over their Country then!
05:48 PM on 11/26/2011
Tourism is a huge part of their economy. There will always be those brave or stupid Western types who flock there. And the rest of it can be made up by Iranians, Turks, Indonesians, Malays. I spent a very short time in Egypt many years ago. It wasn't so much the dirt that irked me it was the indifference to each other and their misery.
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03:07 PM on 11/26/2011
US aid is called an economy by all these low life Hell hole countries now?
02:03 PM on 11/26/2011
People maybe could care less-who will watch a story all day of people protesting in a far away country? You would have to be brain drained. Not much to say about or much different to see-beatings, bleedings etc. About 2 seconds and you have seen it all.
Leave it to the global media to shove this story in everyone's face to bore them enough to take a trip to walmart and participate in the real violence.
01:46 PM on 11/26/2011
What is the problem? The USA just cut them a big check.
unique
Animal lover forever
01:14 PM on 11/26/2011
This is very sad. With the military running
the government, Egyptian people have
gone from the frying pan into the fire.
Good luck Egyptian people.