Egypt to Lift Subsidy on Electricity in 2025

The sun is seen behind high-voltage power lines and electricity pylons at a highway northeast of Cairo, Egypt, March 13, 2019. (Reuters)
The sun is seen behind high-voltage power lines and electricity pylons at a highway northeast of Cairo, Egypt, March 13, 2019. (Reuters)
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Egypt to Lift Subsidy on Electricity in 2025

The sun is seen behind high-voltage power lines and electricity pylons at a highway northeast of Cairo, Egypt, March 13, 2019. (Reuters)
The sun is seen behind high-voltage power lines and electricity pylons at a highway northeast of Cairo, Egypt, March 13, 2019. (Reuters)

Egypt’s Ministry of Electricity and Energy announced on Tuesday a new increase in electricity prices ranging between 17 and 26.7 percent based on consumption.

The new prices will be applied on July 1, the first day of the country’s fiscal year 2020-21.

It will raise electricity prices for homes and shops that use up to 250 KWH (kilowatt hour) per month by 4.3 percent.

“Given the current economic conditions resulting from the coronavirus outbreak and to ease the economic burdens on Egyptian citizens, the deadline for the plan to lift subsidies on electricity prices to the domestic sector has been extended to fiscal year 2024-25 instead of 2021-22,” the Ministry announced in a press statement.

The middle and lower classes in Egypt have been suffering during the past five years from a sharp hike in the prices of goods and services since the government liberalized the exchange rate in late 2016.

Over the past few years, army trucks have spread across the country to sell food products at cheap prices, which increased the police and armed forces’ sales outlets, easing hikes.

According to the statement, for those who consume between 0 and 50 KWH, the price will be 38 piasters per kilowatt instead of 30 piasters.

“From 51 to 100 KWH, the price will be 48 piasters per kilowatt instead of 40 piasters, and for consumers of between 100 and 200 KWH, the price per kilowatt will be 65 instead of 50 piasters.”

From 201 to 350 KWH, the price per kilowatt will be 96 instead of 82 piasters, and for consumers from 351 to 650 KWH, the price of kilowatt will be 128 instead of 100 piasters.

While consumers of more than 1,000 KWH, will pay the same amount, which is 145 piasters per kilowatt.

For commercial use, the Ministry decided to fix the price of those who consume up to 100 KWH per month at 65 piasters.

Consumers of up to 1,000 KWH will be charged 155 piasters, and 160 piasters for consumers of more than 1,000KWH.



The Worst Market Crashes Since 1929 

A screen displaying the closing Hang Seng Index at Central district, in Hong Kong, China, April 7, 2025. (Reuters)
A screen displaying the closing Hang Seng Index at Central district, in Hong Kong, China, April 7, 2025. (Reuters)
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The Worst Market Crashes Since 1929 

A screen displaying the closing Hang Seng Index at Central district, in Hong Kong, China, April 7, 2025. (Reuters)
A screen displaying the closing Hang Seng Index at Central district, in Hong Kong, China, April 7, 2025. (Reuters)

Monday's stock market collapses in Asia and Europe after China retaliated to steep US tariffs revived memories of similar market turmoil after the Covid pandemic and the last global financial crisis.

Analysts called the falls "historic" and some even described it as a "bloodbath", recalling previous collapses since the start of the last century.

Global stocks crashed in March 2020 after the World Health Organization declared Covid-19 a pandemic, putting much of the world under lockdown.

On March 12, 2020 -- the day after the announcement -- Paris fell 12 percent, Madrid 14 percent and Milan 17 percent. London dropped 11 percent and New York 10 percent in the worst fall since 1987.

Further falls came over the following days, with US indexes dropping more than 12 percent.

The rapid response by national governments, which dug deep to keep their economies afloat, helped most markets rebound within months.

The 2008 global financial crisis was caused by bankers in the United States giving subprime mortgages to people on shaky financial footing and then selling them off as investments, fueling a housing boom.

When borrowers became unable to pay their mortgages, millions lost their homes, the stock market crashed and the banking system buckled, culminating with the dramatic bankruptcy of investment bank Lehman Brothers.

From January to October that year, the world's main stock markets fell between 30 and 50 percent.

The start of the millennium saw the deflation of the tech bubble caused by venture capitalists throwing money at unproven companies.

From a record 5,048.62 points on March 10, 2000, the US tech-heavy Nasdaq index lost 39.3 percent in value over the year.

Many internet startups went out of business.

Wall Street crashed on October 19, 1987, on the back of large US trade and budget deficits and interest rates hikes.

The Dow Jones index lost 22.6 percent, causing panic on markets worldwide.

October 24, 1929 became known as "Black Thursday" on Wall Street after a bull market imploded, causing the Dow Jones to lose more than 22 percent of its value at the start of trade.

Stocks recouped most lost ground during the day but the rot set in: October 28 and 29 also saw huge losses in a crisis that marked the beginning of the Great Depression in the United States and a global economic crisis.