Egypt expects to receive a $1 billion World Bank loan approved in December once outstanding paperwork is finalised and is negotiating to secure more aid from Saudi Arabia, International Cooperation Minister Sahar Nasr said on Thursday. Egypt has been negotiating billions of dollars in aid from various lenders to help revive an economy battered by political upheaval since the 2011 revolt and ease a dollar shortage that has crippled import activity and hampered recovery.
The first $1 billion tranche of a three-year, $3 billion loan from the World Bank to support Egypt's budget was approved by the lender in December and was expected to arrive soon after. But Egyptian media has questioned whether the money would come as the programme is linked to the government's economic reform programme, including plans for value-added tax (VAT).
Egypt's new parliament, which held its first session last month, ratified the vast majority of economic laws passed by presidential decree during the three years in which Egypt did not have a legislative house. But it has yet to ratify the government's economic plan or the World Bank loan itself. "We are just working on submitting the required documentation. It is nothing. We are normal. There is nothing (to say) about it," Nasr told Reuters in a telephone interview.
"We need all the documentation, any law, any decree that we put we have to submit in English ... Decrees on subsidies, laws for the establishment of industrial zones, fiscal reforms ... I thought I would wait for parliament to ratify everything meanwhile." The World Bank told Reuters in December that the first tranche was focused on "10 prior actions for policy and institutional reforms" already implemented. The second and third tranches are linked to additional reforms the government plans.
"The whole reform programme will need to be done and not just the VAT being out. We need to have executive regulation in place and be operational," said Nasr, an ex-World Bank official. Nasr said a $500 million loan for budget support from the African Development Bank, part of a $1.5 billion three-year programme also signed in December, had been transferred.
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