Egypt’s Currency Halves In Value In 10 Months

CAIRO, Jan 12 (NNN-MENA) – The Egyptian pound further declined against the U.S. dollar yesterday, plunging to below 31 pounds to the dollar, before settling at 29.7 in the afternoon.

The Egyptian local currency has lost about half of its value since Mar, 2022, when a dollar was worth about 15.7 pounds.

Egypt devalued its local currency twice in 2022, the latest of which was in late Oct.

The devaluation is part of the country’s “shift to a durable exchange rate regime,” demanded by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which has recently approved a loan of three billion dollars to Egypt, to finance its economic and structural reforms.

Over the past year, Egypt has been facing soaring inflation, driven by the global hike in food and energy prices.

Egyptian annual urban consumer inflation rose to 21.3 percent in Dec, compared to 18.7 percent in Nov, marking the highest since late 2017, as data from Egypt’s official statistics agency, CAPMAS, showed on Tuesday.

Also in Dec, the Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) announced raising the interest rate by 300 basis points, to contain high inflation, increasing the deposit rate to 16.25 percent and the lending rate to 17.25 percent.

Last week, Egypt’s two major banks, Banque Misr and the National Bank of Egypt, offered certificates for one-year savings with a record-high 25-percent interest rate, a move that usually signals a devaluation of the local currency.

Egyptian economist, El-Sayed Kheder, said, the hike of the dollar against the pound was “expected,” due to the country’s shortage of foreign currency inflows, as repercussions of the ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict and the lingering COVID-19 pandemic.

“The central bank embarked on precautionary measures, in an attempt to save the pound in the coming period, while issuing savings certificates with a 25-percent annual interest rate, with the aim of collecting cash from the market and combating inflation,” the expert said.

He predicted that, the dollar hike in Egypt “would not last for long,” and that the exchange market in the country would soon restore its balance and stability.