Egypt targets 80% debt-to-GDP ratio by June 2026

Egypt's Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk announced plans to reduce the budget debt-to-GDP ratio to 80% by the end of June 2026, after it fell from 96% to 84% over the past two years. The external debt of budget agencies has also decreased by approximately $4 billion during this period.

Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk spoke on Saturday at a salon hosted by the Institute of National Planning, noting that the government is continuing a path of fiscal discipline, paying more than it borrows to improve economic indicators. He detailed the impact of the government's first package of tax facilities, which encouraged voluntary compliance: taxpayers submitted 612,000 new and amended tax returns and voluntarily disclosed additional economic activity worth EGP 1 trillion, leading to EGP 78 billion in extra tax payments.

The tax authority received 400,000 requests to close old tax files, and 127,000 taxpayers have used the integrated simplified tax system so far. Tax revenues rose 36% last year without new burdens on the business community, while private investment increased 73%, with strong growth in industrial, information technology, and tourism sectors.

Kouchouk announced preparations for a second package of tax incentives for compliant taxpayers, plus upcoming packages for customs and real estate taxes to simplify procedures. The new budget will include higher allocations for health, education, and cash support programs for vulnerable groups. He stated, "The private sector is capable of transforming Egypt into a regional centre for production and exports."

Reducing debt service costs, he added, would free up resources to improve living standards and boost spending on social protection and economic support. He outlined an ambitious vision to develop local administrations' resources, ensuring growth benefits reach citizens across all governorates. Ashraf El-Araby, head of the Institute of National Planning, said the business and economic community welcomes the current incentives and facilitations, emphasizing the need to accelerate toward Egypt Vision 2030 targets and narrow economic gaps.

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Egypt is targeting an exceptional improvement in its budget debt indicators while implementing a second package of tax facilities that includes cutting value-added tax on medical equipment to 5% from 14%, Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk said on Tuesday. Speaking at the Hapi Journal Conference on economic competitiveness, Kouchouk emphasized balancing support for economic activity with fiscal discipline to create more room for human development spending.

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Building on recent statements at the Council of the Union of Arab Chambers of Commerce, Egypt's Finance Minister Ahmed Kouchouk highlighted further progress in fiscal policy during a dialogue session at the Bibliotheca Alexandrina. He announced increased budget allocations for industrial and export activities plus human development, while committing to facilitations that expand revenues without new burdens on investors or citizens.

Egypt’s Ministry of Finance has announced plans to issue local debt instruments worth EGP 843bn in February 2025, as part of a broader strategy. The plan encompasses tenders totaling EGP 2.703tn in the third quarter of FY 2025/2026 to repay maturing debts and fund the state budget deficit.

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Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly announced that Egypt has paid approximately $5bn in outstanding arrears to foreign partners in the petroleum sector, while committing to settle regular monthly invoices. He made the statement during a weekly cabinet meeting in the New Administrative Capital. The arrears are projected to drop to $1.2bn by June 30, 2026.

 

 

 

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