Egypt Eyes Bread Subsidy Overhaul as Global Inflation Bites

Egypt is considering replacing the popular bread subsidy with cash payments to the poor to protect the budget from a sharp rise in international wheat prices (Reuters)
Egypt is considering replacing the popular bread subsidy with cash payments to the poor to protect the budget from a sharp rise in international wheat prices (Reuters)
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Egypt Eyes Bread Subsidy Overhaul as Global Inflation Bites

Egypt is considering replacing the popular bread subsidy with cash payments to the poor to protect the budget from a sharp rise in international wheat prices (Reuters)
Egypt is considering replacing the popular bread subsidy with cash payments to the poor to protect the budget from a sharp rise in international wheat prices (Reuters)

Egypt is considering replacing a popular bread subsidy with cash payments for the poor to protect the budget from soaring global wheat prices, but domestic inflation could make the government opt for a less ambitious reform.

Under the existing program, more than 60 million Egyptians, or nearly two thirds of the population, get five loaves of round bread daily for 50 cents a month, little changed since countrywide “bread riots” prevented a price hike in the 1970s.

The handout is a lifeline to the poor, but is widely criticized as wasteful. High global prices for wheat, which Egypt imports on a vast scale, led President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to say last year that it was time to tackle the bread subsidy.

Ali Moselhy, the minister in charge of subsidies, told Reuters that inflation, which has climbed in recent months to 6% from 4% earlier in 2021, made it harder to replace the support for bread and other food with cash handouts.

“When inflation is stable, then you can introduce cash,” he said.

Moselhy has said he personally favors giving people money specifically to buy bread. Eligible Egyptians already get a monthly $3.20 voucher for other subsidised food.

However, he said a broader idea to introduce unconditional payments, favored by many economists as the most efficient welfare system, risked driving up prices by putting more cash into circulation at a time of rising inflation.

The government aims to draw up a plan for reformed food subsidies in time for March budget preparations, officials have recently said.

Moselhy said that for now, the government had not taken a decision on what to do, and was focused on improving the database of recipients, with the intention of “finding out who needs what.”

That could mean that any changes are more limited in nature, perhaps trimming the program through means testing, restricting how many people in a household are eligible, or increasing the price of subsidized bread.

Bassant Ibrahim, 36, a housewife living in Beheira, north-west of Cairo, said any such restrictions should not hurt families like hers, which relies on the subsidies to bolster her husband's $180-a-month teaching salary and feed four children.

"There are rich people with cards who you can sift out, but the poor shouldn't have to pay the price," said Ibrahim, who said the family daily ate the ten loaves of bread they received, sometimes finishing them by lunchtime.

Ahmed Mohamed, 24, a married gardener in Cairo with two children, said he could live without the government paying for his daily bread.

"There are other people who need it more than I do," he said.

However, Ahmed Darwish, a former minister who oversaw a transition to a smart subsidy card system in the early 2000s, said authorities would have to step carefully to reassure people that any changes will not leave them overly exposed.

"Until the government says that this subsidy would be increased with inflation, they have to comfort people," Darwish said.



Türkiye's Simsek to Meet Ratings Agencies, Investors on US Trip

Cargo ships are anchored in the Marmara Sea as they await to cross the Bosphorus, in Istanbul, Türkiye, Sunday, April 13, 2025. (AP)
Cargo ships are anchored in the Marmara Sea as they await to cross the Bosphorus, in Istanbul, Türkiye, Sunday, April 13, 2025. (AP)
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Türkiye's Simsek to Meet Ratings Agencies, Investors on US Trip

Cargo ships are anchored in the Marmara Sea as they await to cross the Bosphorus, in Istanbul, Türkiye, Sunday, April 13, 2025. (AP)
Cargo ships are anchored in the Marmara Sea as they await to cross the Bosphorus, in Istanbul, Türkiye, Sunday, April 13, 2025. (AP)

Turkish Finance Minister Mehmet Simsek said he will meet with rating agencies, investors and companies planning to shift supply to Türkiye during a visit to the United States this week.

"I will be in America this week for the IMF, World Bank and G20 meetings. We will meet with rating agencies in New York at the beginning of the week and then with direct investors based in America," Simsek told reporters during a weekend visit to Türkiye's Black Sea province of Giresun.

"We will meet with real sector representatives, especially US companies that plan to shift their supply to Türkiye, especially following recent developments," he said, referring to the tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump.

Last Friday, Türkiye's overnight interest rate rose to the new upper band of the rate corridor, around 49%, a day after the central bank's surprise policy tightening.

Those moves followed weeks of market turmoil triggered by the March arrest of Istanbul Mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's main political rival, and then the imposition of tariffs by Trump.

Simsek said he would attend around 15 bilateral meetings or meetings organized by investment banks each day in the United States, and would convey the message that Türkiye's economic program will not change.

"In all these meetings, we will say that there is no change in the program, that there is a very strong political will behind the program," Simsek said.