Egypt to up power rates

Egypt to up power rates
Updated 15 April 2014
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Egypt to up power rates

Egypt to up power rates

WASHINGTON: Egypt plans to boost electricity prices for the richest 20 percent of its citizens before the presidential elections at the end of May, as the country has “no time to waste” in starting reforms, the planning minister said.
Ashraf Al-Arabi, Egypt’s minister of planning and international cooperation, this week said the decision on raising gasoline prices will be taken “very soon,” but declined to provide further details.
Al-Arabi’s sense of urgency suggested that for the first time in years, Egypt was on the same page with the International Monetary Fund, which has long urged the country to push through structural reforms, such as gradually reducing costly subsidies.
After the 2011 uprising that toppled Hosni Mubarak, already high energy subsidy costs ballooned to a fifth of state spending as the Egyptian pound plunged, making imports more expensive.
Egypt’s finance minister said last month that spending on energy subsidies next year would be 10-12 percent above the 130 billion Egyptian pounds ($19 billion) budgeted for, unless immediate reforms are made.
“This energy subsidy system is unsustainable; we cannot afford (for) this to continue,” Al-Arabi said in an interview on the sidelines of the IMF-World Bank meetings in Washington.
“We don’t have time to waste. ... It’s better for Egypt to start some of these measures at least before the presidential election, just to pave the way for the coming president, to make his life easier,” he said.
Al-Arabi refused to specify by how much electricity prices would rise, saying the issue was still under negotiation. He also emphasized the price hikes would be gradual, and could take three to five years to implement in full.
He said the government had agreed to allocate at least 15 percent of its subsidy savings to social programs and the poor.
“This will benefit the poor, because we will take this from the rich and reallocate it to the poor and social spending,” he said. “So I believe we have a good story to tell to the Egyptian people.”
“What I think Egypt should do is use continued Gulf support to create a breathing space, so that reform can be gradual, and you’re not forced into abrupt reforms by running out of money,” Christopher Jarvis, the IMF’s mission chief for Egypt, said in an earlier briefing with reporters.
“I think the sooner reform is started, the better. But I see it as a process that will take several years,” he added.