PM Madbouly projects $48-50B non-oil exports for 2025, announces investment incentives

Following his recent meeting with export councils, Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly projected Egypt's non-oil exports to reach $48-50 billion by year-end—a 20% rise from 2024—while confirming the $145 billion total exports target by 2030 is achievable amid the lowest trade deficit in a decade.

At Wednesday's weekly press conference, Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly, building on Monday's discussions with export councils, highlighted non-oil merchandise exports' projected 20% growth to $48-50 billion for 2025 after reaching about $40 billion in 2024.

He noted the government's finalization of a new investment incentives package, to be unveiled soon by President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi, to boost competitiveness. The Suez Canal Economic Zone has drawn $13.5 billion in investments, with Qantara West poised for over $4 billion in exports soon.

On social fronts, about 29% of Egyptians live below the poverty line per official data—a slight rise from reforms—but price reductions on essentials and investor stability are priorities. Madbouly promised a 'qualitative leap' in services via development plans.

Labeling 2024 an 'exceptional year' of challenges like real estate slumps and global inflation, he cautioned against recession talk and praised Italian firm Eni's healthcare contributions as part of state-partner human development efforts.

Labaran da ke da alaƙa

Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly urged business leaders to double their investments in Egypt, citing the country's lowest trade deficit in a decade and record non-oil exports as signs of a promising economic climate. Speaking at a meeting with export council heads and Investment Minister Hassan El-Khatib, Madbouly called on local and foreign investors to seize current opportunities.

An Ruwaito ta hanyar AI

Egypt’s non-oil exports grew by 18% to $44.392bn in the first 11 months of 2025, helping to narrow the trade deficit by 12% to $30.346bn. Imports rose modestly by 4% to $74.738bn during the same period. Minister of Investment and Foreign Trade Hassan El-Khatib reviewed these figures from the General Organisation for Export and Import Control.

Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly met with Minister of Industry Khaled Hashem in the New Administrative Capital to review the ministry's vision and work plan for the coming phase. Madbouly stressed that the industrial sector is among the government's top priorities, noting the momentum from recent economic reforms. Hashem presented a roadmap focused on increasing non-oil exports through several strategic pillars.

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The Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics released its monthly Foreign Trade Data bulletin for October 2025, showing Egypt's trade deficit at $4.58bn, up 1.3% from the previous year. Exports fell 1.1% to $4.17bn, while imports edged up 0.18% to $8.75bn.

 

 

 

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