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 Off the Agenda:  The Unresolved Question of Egypt's Economy
	 By Ramzy Baroud  Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 16, 2012 
 A new Egypt demands a new constitution and president. Many 
	pressing questions also need to be addressed, including the 
	religious-secular divide, the value of Sharia in the making of law, 
	citizenship, minority rights, the rule of civil society, foreign policy, and 
	much more.
 
 One issue that requires urgent attention in the current 
	discussion is that of Egypt's shattered economy. In the first round of 
	elections on May 23, Egypt’s presidential candidates appeared to hold vastly 
	different ideas regarding their vision for the future. With the elimination 
	of independent candidate Hamdeen Sabahy before the final round on June 
	16-17, the economic program for the two remaining candidates seemed oddly 
	similar and suspiciously familiar.
 
 The oddity stems from the fact 
	that the two contenders - Freedom and Justice Party candidate Mohamed Mursi 
	and former Prime Minister Ahmed Shafiq – are supposed to represent the two 
	extremes defining Egypt after the 2011 revolution. Mursi is a Muslim 
	Brotherhood figure, long oppressed by the very regime that Shafiq dutifully 
	served.
 
 The “run-off in Egypt's presidential elections 
	between the two most polarizing candidates has escalated investor concerns 
	of renewed unrest,” claimed Arabia Monitor, a market research company. 
	However, both candidates are united by their advocacy of the same free 
	market economy, the guiding model for the discredited Mubarak regime. The 
	news is hardly shocking in the case of Shafiq, an establishment man who 
	would not be expected to challenge Egypt’s chronic inequality; Mursi's 
	position is bewildering.
 
 While “rivals portray the 
	Brotherhood as a nebulous organization obsessed with religion,” according to 
	Patrick Werr, “its wide-ranging plan, details of which were revealed during 
	the buildup to last month’s first-round presidential vote, projects a 
	pragmatism that puts rapid economic growth ahead of ideology.” The 
	Brotherhood ‘pragmatism’ is only commended here because it promotes “a 
	strongly free-market economic plan” and a pledge to move quickly to secure a 
	loan from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
 
 Some estimates put 
	Egypt’s current debt at close to $190 billion. The Egyptian revolution, 
	which in part sought economic justice and equitable distribution of wealth, 
	is yet to produce a new economic reality. Under Mubarak, the economy 
	operated through a selective interpretation of free market economy marred by 
	extreme corruption in favor of the ruling elite. Over 15 months of haggling 
	between the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), angry masses, a new 
	elected parliament and other forces have now wreaked havoc on an already 
	struggling economy. The Egyptian pound is facing the prospect of ‘disorderly 
	devaluation.’ The IMF's original loan offer of $3.2 billion, rejected by 
	Egypt at the time, would not be enough to rectify the damage. Per Egyptian 
	government and IMF estimates, the country requires $10-12 billion to secure 
	the pound.
 
 Currency devaluation is only a small aspect of Egypt’s 
	current economic woes. The Economist (May 19-25) reported that Egypt’s 
	foreign exchange reserve is now down to third of its value of 15 months ago 
	and the budget deficit has surged to 10 percent of GDP. “The budget 
	shortfall could be resolved by a stroke of scrapping energy subsidies, but 
	in a country where 40% of people live in poverty; this is a sizzling 
	political potato.”
 
 It is actually much more than a ‘sizzling 
	political potato’. The handling of the economy will ultimately make or break 
	the relationship between Egypt’s new rulers and its people - most of whom 
	are not only politically disfranchised, but economically marginalized as 
	well.
 
 Although most Egyptians now frown at Mubarak’s legacy, the 
	country’s economic indicators were for years perceived favorably by Western 
	financial institutions. After all Egypt recorded steady growth. Its 
	‘economic reforms’ post 1991 were largely celebrated for further 
	liberalizing trade and investment, cutting subsidies (thus forcing the poor 
	to continue teetering at the edge of poverty and utter desolation) and 
	dismantling the public sector. The IMF and other Western lending 
	institutions do not settle for anything but more austerity measures - 
	regardless of whether Egypt’s new president is a bearded Muslim or an avowed 
	liberal. The only ideology that matters for the IMF is the free market 
	economy.
 
 So what must be done for the almost 14.2 million people 
	who live on less than one US dollar a day? 1.5 million Egyptian currently 
	live in a large graveyard at the outskirts of Cairo. Austerity and further 
	cuts could only lead to the kind of misery that instigated last year’s 
	revolution.
 
 Egypt’s remaining candidates promise to revive the 
	economy while keeping social justice on the agenda. While Shafiq has 
	promised an abundance of perks to various sectors of society, the 
	Brotherhood has been promoting a detailed program called Al-Nahda, or The 
	Renaissance. Enlisting the help of internationally renowned economists such 
	as Peru’s Hernando de Soto Polar, Al-Nahda is reportedly a study of many 
	economic models around the world, including Turkey, Malaysia and South 
	Africa.
 
 The Brotherhood’s initial presidential candidate, Khairat 
	al-Shater was the “driving force behind the project,” according to the Daily 
	Beast (June 7). In an interview last April, he laid down the basic premise 
	of his plan: “The Egyptian economy must rely to a very, very large degree on 
	the private sector. The priority is for Egyptian investors, then Arab then 
	foreign.”
 
 It is expected that Egypt’s intense public discussions in 
	the current phase will be fixed on foundational issues such as the formation 
	of a constitutional assembly and a redefinition of the rule of SCAF. But 
	Egypt’s economy is deeply flawed. An IMF-style free market economy is of no 
	use to millions of Egyptians when they lack proper education and the most 
	basic rights and opportunities. For an Egyptian day laborer to have a better 
	life in a country with a huge and growing income gap between rich and poor, 
	something fundamental needs to take place.
 
 Referencing ‘social 
	justice’ while negotiating IMF loans suggests a precarious start for any 
	truly fundamental economic reforms. While Hamdeen Sabahy is no longer in the 
	race to challenge the free market wisdom of his contenders, the debate must 
	not end here.
 
 - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
 
 
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