Why Egypt?
- Macroeconomic stability and robust growth
In light of the worldwide economic downturn, Egypt experienced minimal decline and in contrasts with many economies around the globe emerged resident and full of opportunity. Egypt’s GDP fell from 7.2% in 2007/2008 to 4.7% 2008/2009 but it recorded 5.1% in Q3 2009/2010 and projected to reach 6.5% by 2015. Among the nation’s fastest growing sectors are construction, communication and information technology, tourism, manufacturing and transportation.
- A large, trained, competitively priced labor force
At about 25 million, Egypt’s labor pool is the largest in the region. For decades, Egypt has had a reputation as a net regional exporter of educated, skilled labor. However, as domestic demand for skilled labor rises, young people are increasingly choosing to pursue opportunities at home. Complementing world-class universities and technical schools, a new national industrial training program is training workers to fill some 500,000 new jobs in manufacturing.
Each year, around 324,000 Egyptians obtain university degrees, of whom 16,000 are trained engineers and 14,000 have degrees in science and technology. In addition, 22,000 graduate with European language skills.
Skills-intensive and service-based sectors such as CIT, financial services and tourism are among Egypt’s economic leaders. Wages in these sectors are very competitive and more stable than wage levels in competitor countries.
Egypt has emerged as a consumer market of significant importance in the region, as witnessed by the arrival of dozens of global brands and the sharp expansion of retail sales in the past two years. This is partly due to the sheer size of Egypt’s population that put it as the most populated country in Africa and the Middle East, as well as Per capita income that reached EGP 13648 in 2008/2009 from EGP 5544 in 2000/2001. the fact that 50% of Egyptian are between the age 15-44 has also impacted spending and investment trends.
Egypt boasts a broad, world-class infrastructure base. Three independent mobile (cellular) phone networks cover nearly 100% of the country’s inhabited land. Wireline broadband is readily available in urban centers. The country’s 15 commercial ports serve the nation’s exporters and importers alike, while an expanding, upgrading airport network caters to both passenger and cargo traffic. Egypt also provides competitively priced and reliable supplies of power, water and gas.
Corporate and personal taxes each top out at only 20% in Egypt. Personal taxes have been cut from 32% to 20%, while corporate taxes have been slashed from 42% to 20%. The nation’s newly overhauled tax code is easy to navigate, and the country has moved to random-sample auditing. The nation’s largest corporate taxpayers are served by a special, highly trained unit at the Tax Authority.
- Preferential access to key global markets
Egypt has access to large key markets through various multilateral and bilateral trade agreements with the USA, European, Middle Eastern and African countries; which secures benefits to Egyptian-based producers supplying these markets.
Egypt’s economy is among the most diverse in the Middle East and North Africa, helping ensure long-term growth prospects and stability for all sectors. In 2008/2009 the Industrial Sector accounts for 16.6% of GDP while CIT, tourism and financial services accounts for 10.2% from GDP and retail accounts for 11.5% and 13.7% for agriculture.