Economy of Egypt

The economy of Egypt used to be a highly centralized economy, focused on import substitution under president Gamal Abdel Nasser (1954–1970). During the rule of president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi (2014–present), the economy follows Egypt's 2030 Vision. The policy is aimed at diversifying Egypt's economy. The country's economy is the second largest in Africa by nominal GDP, and 38th in worldwide ranking as of 2023.

Economy of Egypt
Cairo, the financial center of Egypt
CurrencyEgyptian pound (ISO code: EGP, abbreviation: LE)
1 July – 30 June
Trade organisations
AfCFTA, African Union, COMESA, CAEU, WTO, BRICS
Country group
Statistics
Population 107,212,000 (2023 est.)
GDP
  • US$347.594 billion (nominal, 2024 est.)
  • US$1.899 trillion (PPP, 2024 est.)
GDP rank
  • 38th (nominal; 2024)
  • 18th (PPP; 2024)
GDP growth
  • 3.8% (2023)
GDP per capita
  • US$3,225 (nominal, 2024 est.)
  • US$17,614 (PPP, 2024 est.)
GDP per capita rank
  • 133rd (nominal; 2024)
  • 92nd (PPP; 2024)
GDP by sector
  • Agriculture: 11.7%
  • Industry: 34.3%
  • Services: 54%
  • (2017 est.)
GDP by component
  • Household consumption: 86.8%
  • Government consumption: 10.1%
  • Investment in fixed capital: 14.8%
  • Investment in inventories: 0.5%
  • Exports of goods and services: 16.3%
  • Imports of goods and services: −28.5%
  • (2017 est.)
  • 35.727% (2023 est.)
Population below poverty line
  • 2.5% at $2.15/day (2023)
  • 5% at $3.65/day (2017)
  • 4.5% in extreme poverty (2019/2020)
  • 32% below national poverty line (2024 est.)
60% of egypt population are poor or middle class citizens
31.5 medium (2017)
  • 0.731 high (2021) (97th)
  • 0.519 high IHDI (2021) (100th)
Labour force
  • 30 million (2023)
  • 41.9% employment rate (Q2 2021)
Labour force by occupation
  • Agriculture: 25.8%
  • Industry: 25.1%
  • Services: 49.1%
  • (2015 est.)
Unemployment
  • 7.5% (2024 est.)
  • 5.0% youth unemployment (Q2 2021; 15 to 19 year-olds)
  • 2.211 million unemployed (Q3 2021)
Main industries
textiles, food processing, tourism, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, hydrocarbons, construction, cement, metals, light manufactures
External
ExportsUS$53.9 billion (2022)
Export goods
refined petroleum, crude petroleum, petroleum gas, nitrogenous fertilizers and gold
Main export partners
  •  Turkey 7.9%
  •  Italy 6.2%
  •  United States 5.9%
  •  Spain 5.6%
  •  India 4.8%
  •  United Arab Emirates 4.4%
  •  Saudi Arabia 4.4%
  •  France 4%
  •  United Kingdom 3.9%
  •  Greece 3%
  • (2022)
ImportsUS$95.7 billion (2022)
Import goods
refined petroleum, wheat, cars, crude petroleum and maize
Main import partners
  •  China 17.4%
  •  United States 6.9%
  •  Saudi Arabia 6.7%
  •  United Arab Emirates 5.7%
  •  Turkey 4.9%
  •  India 4.3%
  •  Germany 4.1%
  •  Italy 3.6%
  •  Brazil 3.1%
  •  France 3%
  • (2022)
FDI stock
  • US$132.477 billion (2020)
  • Abroad: US$5.852 billion (2020)
US$165 billion (March 2023; 46th)
Public finances
Government debt
92.684% of GDP (2023)
−US$6.811 billion (2023 est.)
RevenuesE£1.864 trillion (2023)
ExpensesE£2.339 trillion (2023)
Credit rating
  • Standard & Poor's:
  • B
  • Outlook: Stable

  • Moody's:
  • B3
  • Outlook: Stable

  • Fitch:
  • B+
  • Outlook: Stable

  • Scope Ratings:
  • B−
  • Outlook: Stable
US$34.660 billion (May 2023)
Main data source: CIA World Fact Book
All values, unless otherwise stated, are in US dollars.

Since the 2000s, the pace of structural reforms (including fiscal and monetary policies, taxation, privatization and new business legislation) helped Egypt move towards a more market-oriented economy and prompted increased foreign investment. The reforms and policies have strengthened macroeconomic annual growth results. As Egypt's economy healed, other prominent issues like unemployment and poverty began to decline significantly. The country benefits from political stability; its proximity to Europe, and increased exports. From an investor perspective, Egypt is stable and well-supported by external stakeholders.

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