You are here

Business

Business section

Judge clears AT&T-Time Warner deal

By - Jun 14,2018 - Last updated at Jun 14,2018

People walk past the Time Warner Centre in New York City on Tuesday (AFP photo)

WASHINGTON — A US federal judge on Tuesday approved the $85 billion merger of wireless and broadband giant AT&T with media-entertainment conglomerate Time Warner, delivering a rebuke to Donald Trump's administration in its first major antitrust court case.

US District Judge Richard Leon said the government had failed to meet its burden of proof that the tie-up between the largest US pay-TV operator and the media entertainment giant would harm competition.

The case had been closely watched as setting a benchmark for other big corporate mergers, especially in the media and communications sector.

Leon said the case fell short on all counts and warned the government against seeking to hold up the deal with an appeal, saying that would cause "irreparable" harm to the two companies whose tie-up has been delayed for a year and a half.

"There would be no irreparable harm to the government [with a delay], only to the companies," Leon told the packed courtroom in an unusual session to announce his opinion.

"The government has taken its best shot and lost."

Leon's 172-page ruling was a total victory for the companies. It said the government failed to back up its three theories of harm to consumers from the mega-merger.

He maintained that the government's claim that pay TV costs would rise from the tie-up was based on "speculative" logic and that its study from an expert witness was contradicted by other evidence from the government.

 

'Sound and proper' repudiation 

 

Daniel Petrocelli, who led the legal team for the two companies, told reporters outside the courthouse that the decision marked a "sound and proper" repudiation of the government's case.

"We're disappointed that it has taken 18 months to get here but we're relieved that it's finally behind us," he said.

He said the ruling "stands as a testament to the wisdom of the combination of these two great companies and how it will benefit consumers for generations to come”.

AT&T General Counsel David McAtee said in a statement he was pleased with the outcome and expected the deal would be closed by June 20.

The deal brings together AT&T's wireless and broadband networks and its DirecTV subscription service with the media assets of Time Warner, which include CNN and other Turner cable channels, Cartoon Network, premium channel HBO and the Warner Bros studios.

Makan Delrahim, head of the Justice Department's antitrust division, said the government was considering its next steps.

"We are disappointed with the court's decision today," he said.

"We continue to believe that the pay-TV market will be less competitive and less innovative as a result of the proposed merger between AT&T and Time Warner."

John Bergmayer of the consumer group Public Knowledge said he expected the government would appeal.

"In the meantime, not only may consumers be harmed directly by the anticompetitive harms that this merger will cause, such as higher bills and fewer choices of programming and provider, but also by the many other mergers it will encourage," Bergmayer said.

Some analysts say the court approval offers an effective green light to other major deals, including the Walt Disney offer to buy key film and television assets of 21st Century Fox and the T-Mobile/Sprint agreement in wireless.

"Due to AT&T already owning Direct TV and having U-verse, it has been using a lot of Time Warner content for some time. Thus, I don't think the integration will be as difficult as it first appears," said Morningstar analyst Allan Nichols.

But Rebecca Lieb of Kaleido Insights warned that mergers like these are usually "very difficult" to implement.

"Merging content distribution with creation is easier said than done, particularly on a scale that encompasses all media," she added.

 

New services, packages 

 

AT&T and Time Warner argue they need more scale to compete with online rivals like Netflix and Amazon and with Silicon Valley giants like Google, Facebook and Apple, which are expanding in the rapidly evolving sector.

Independent media analyst Alan Wolk said the clear approval opens the door to AT&T offering new kinds of services and packages that can tie into 5G, or fifth-generation wireless networks.

"Imagine AT&T giving free CNN and free HBO to every AT&T wireless subscriber," Wolk said.

Time Warner gets better viewership data to more effectively compete against online platforms like Netflix, which "will make it easier for them to better target ads", Wolk added.

Abu-Ghazaleh receives honorary doctorate

By - Jun 14,2018 - Last updated at Jun 14,2018

AMMAN — Talal Abu-Ghazaleh, founder and chairman of Talal Abu-Ghazaleh Organisation, has received an honorary doctorate in Humane Letters from the Lebanese American University (LAU) for his leading role in the development of the business sector globally, according to a statement received by The Jordan times on Wednesday.

He was awarded the honorary doctorate during the LAU 93rd Annual Commencement Exercises held in Beirut.

Abu-Ghazaleh thanked LAU's President Joseph G. Jabbra for this honour, and recalled his own graduation ceremony in the 60s. He spoke about his personal experience and asked LAU graduates and students to remember the "prescription for success".

"Just like your non-stop heart, rest is bad for your health. At school, you learn lessons and sit for exams, at the workplace you face exams and learn from them," he noted. 

Sterling falls to five-day low as Brexit debate gets under way

By - Jun 12,2018 - Last updated at Jun 12,2018

Anti-Brexit demonstrators protest opposite of the Houses of Parliament in London, Britain, on Tuesday (Reuters photo)

LONDON — The pound fell to a five-day low on Tuesday, reflecting wariness among investors about a parliamentary debate under way on amendments to Britain’s EU withdrawal bill.

Prime Minister Theresa May faces a showdown with lawmakers who want power to force her government to go back to the negotiating table if they reject a Brexit deal, testing her plans for leaving the European Union.

A minister long critical of the government’s handling of Brexit resigned earlier in protest at what he called its “wish to limit” the role of lawmakers in the process.

At 13:45 GMT, the pound was down 0.2 per cent against the dollar at $1.3359, close to a five-day low, and declined 0.3 per cent versus the euro to 88.29 pence. 

Two days of Brexit talks this week and a flurry of economic data may determine whether sterling’s two-month losing streak continues.

“The pound is likely to weaken if the government is defeated in key amendment votes at least initially as concerns over political stability will heighten,” MUFG analysts said.

“However, the amendments, if approved, could ultimately help to soften the final Brexit outcome which would be more favourable for the pound.”

Earlier on Tuesday markets shrugged off weaker-than-expected wage growth data, the latest sign of protracted weakness in the British economy.

Several companies have announced store closures and job cuts, while poor industrial production output numbers published on Monday hit sterling.

Those developments are likely to cut expectations of a Bank of England rate rise in August, given the central bank has said it wants to see more wage pressures before it hikes rates. 

Money markets currently price in a 44 per cent chance of a 25 basis point hike in August.

Euro rises on the backdrop of Italy’s pledge, Canadian dollar falls after G-7

By - Jun 12,2018 - Last updated at Jun 12,2018

The euro rises to a near two-week high on Monday (Reuters file photo)

NEW YORK — The euro rose to a near two-week high on Monday after assurances from Italy that it would not leave the European Union calmed investors’ nerves before the European Central Bank (ECB) policy meeting on Thursday.

Italy’s Economy Minister Giovanni Tria said on Sunday his new coalition government would not leave the euro or issue securities to pay off companies owed money by the state, a plan investors viewed as a first step toward exiting the bloc. 

Tria’s promise sent Italian borrowing costs down sharply on Monday as the euro inched up 0.1 per cent to $1.1782 towards a two-week high of $1.1840 touched on Thursday, Reuters data showed.

“The Italy comments calmed fears but let’s wait for the government’s policy actions this summer. That will decide the market’s direction,” said MUFG currency strategist Lee Hardman.

Investors are raising their bets that the ECB will signal at a policy meeting later

this week a tapering down of its 2.55 trillion euro bond-buying programme as early as September, following a flurry of hawkish comments by officials last week.

The euro bounced despite heightened worries about a global trade war following a spat at the G-7 summit in Canada between US President Donald Trump and other leaders over automobile tariffs and other issues. Trump lashed out at Canada and Europe over the US trade deficit after he arrived in Singapore, where he is due to hold a critical meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un on Tuesday.

The Mexican peso and Canadian dollar slid on fears that Trump may scrap the North American Free Trade Agreement. 

The Canadian dollar fell 0.5 per cent to C$1.2993, while the Mexican peso shed 1.1 per cent at 20.522 peso per US dollar. 

Analysts said the fairly muted reaction in currencies reflected the low expectations markets had for the G-7 summit, despite the fact that the euro is sensitive to the threat of US tariffs on cars.

“Trade tensions are dominating in the aftermath of the G-7 summit and headline risk is set to remain elevated in the absence of any significant domestic releases,” ScotiaBank analysts wrote in a research note.

Before the ECB meeting, the US Federal Reserve is almost unanimously expected to raise interest rates for the second time this year on Wednesday. The market’s focus will be on the Fed’s projection on the path of future interest rates.

Futures market implied traders expect the Fed to raise overnight borrowing at least one more time in 2018 after a possible rate increase on Wednesday, according to CME Group’s FedWatch programme.

The dollar index was steady at 93.597, rising further from a three-week low set last Thursday.

Trump torpedoes G-7 effort to ease trade spat, threatens auto tariffs

By - Jun 11,2018 - Last updated at Jun 11,2018

This photo released on Twitter by the German government’s spokesman Steffen Seibert on Saturday and taken by the German government’s photographer Jesco Denzel shows US President Donald Trump (right) talking with German Chancellor Angela Merkel (centre) and surrounded by other G-7 leaders during a meeting of the G-7 summit in La Malbaie, Quebec, Canada (AFP PHOTO)

LA MALBAIE, Quebec — US President Donald Trump on Saturday threw the G7’s efforts to show a united front into disarray after he became angry with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and said he might double down on import tariffs by hitting the sensitive auto industry.

Trump’s bombshell announcement that he was backing out of the Group of Seven communique, made after he left the summit in Canada early, torpedoed what appeared to be a fragile consensus on the trade dispute between Washington and its top allies.

“PM Justin Trudeau of Canada acted so meek and mild during our @G-7 meetings only to give a news conference after I left saying that, ‘US Tariffs were kind of insulting’ and he ‘will not be pushed around.’ …Our Tariffs are in response to his of 270 per cent on dairy!” the US president Tweeted.

In his press conference, Trudeau had spoken of retaliatory measures that Canada would take next month in response to Trump’s decision to slap tariffs on steel and aluminum imports from Canada, Mexico and the European Union.

“Canadians, we’re polite, we’re reasonable but we also will not be pushed around,” Trudeau, the host of the two-day summit in La Malbaie, Quebec, told reporters.

Reacting to Trump’s tweets, Trudeau’s office said: “We are focused on everything we accomplished here at the summit. The prime minister said nothing he hasn’t said before — both in public, and in private conversations with the president.”

In Paris, a French presidency official said France and Europe stood by the G-7 communique and anyone departing from the commitments made at the summit would be showing their “incoherence and inconsistency”.

“International cooperation cannot depend on being angry and on sound bites. Let’s be serious,” the official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters.

Trump’s salvo capped a dizzying two days of controversies that began with his suggestion Russia be readmitted to the G-7, then what a French official described as a “rant” full of “recriminations” against US trading partners, followed by Trump’s denial of any contention with leaders at the summit and his description of their relationship as a “10”. 

By ordering his representatives to back out of the communique, Trump appeared to be asserting his oft-stated aim of upsetting the status quo whether by pulling out of the global climate accord or the international nuclear deal with Iran or threats to scrap the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).

The communique, which appeared to have papered over the cracks that have surfaced in the G-7, said the leaders of the United States, Canada, Britain, France, Italy, Germany and Japan agreed on the need for “free, fair, and mutually beneficial trade” and the importance of fighting protectionism.

“We strive to reduce tariff barriers, non-tariff barriers and subsidies,” the statement said.

Trump’s reversal, announced while he was en route to Singapore for a meeting with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, sent his G-7 partners scrambling. 

Trump’s counterparts in the G-7 had sought this week to find some semblance of consensus with Washington on trade and the other key issues that have formed the basis of the 42-year-old grouping of industrialised nations.

French President Emmanuel Macron had labelled the summit a success before Trump’s Twitter posts, saying there was relief within the G-7 that an escalation of the trade dispute had been avoided.

“The nature of the debate we had was rather appeasement and it stopped the escalation in terms of behaviour,” Macron, who had exchanged terse Twitter messages with Trump in the run-up to the summit, told reporters.

“It allowed a dialogue, where for weeks there were uncoordinated unilateral actions and non-cooperation.”

 

Nervous investors 

 

Trump says his tariffs are meant to protect US industry and workers from unfair international competition as part of his “America First” agenda.

The prospect that he could be moving toward an even greater protectionist trade policy is likely to chill financial markets worried about tit-for-tat escalation that could lead to a full-blown global trade war.

Trump has announced tariffs of up to $150 billion on Chinese goods over US complaints of Beijing’s trade practices and its alleged theft of US technology. China has vowed to retaliate in equal measure. 

Canada, Mexico and the EU also are moving ahead with their own levies on US goods.

But tariffs on US imports of cars and auto parts would devastate the Canadian auto industry, which is highly integrated with the US sector. They could also damage Japan and Germany.

The Trump administration announced two weeks ago that it would investigate whether auto imports hurt US national security, the first step toward tariffs similar to the ones he imposed on steel and aluminum imports last week.

Earlier on Saturday, Trump told reporters it would be “very easy” to make the case for tariffs on auto imports using the rationale that they threaten national security.

“It’s economic. It’s the balance sheet. To have a great military, you need a great balance sheet,” he said.

Such a move could make it nearly impossible to renegotiate the terms of the 1994 NAFTA pact between the United States, Canada and Mexico.

On Saturday, Trump repeated his desire to have a sunset clause in an updated NAFTA deal, a demand Trudeau rejected again.

Allies race to clinch G-7 face-saver before Trump’s early exit

By - Jun 10,2018 - Last updated at Jun 11,2018

US President Donald Trump and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau hold a meeting on the sidelines of the G-7 summit in La Malbaie, Quebec, Canada, on Friday (AFP photo)

LA MALBAIE, Canada — President Donald Trump quit the G-7 summit in Quebec early Saturday having made no concessions to his allies' anger at his imposition of tariffs designed, in his eyes, to rebalance world trade.

In fact, the US leader instead boasted he had made progress in convincing his counterparts from the world's richest democracies of the need to change the rules of the game in America's favour.

Trump left the summit for Singapore and his historic nuclear summit with Kim Jong-un in much the same position as he had come in — alone in the face of the six other G-7 members working together to defend multilateral trade rules.

An official from French President Emmanuel Macron's office said there was still hope a joint communique would be signed, with Washington opting out of clauses on climate and the environment, but that US negotiators are opposing language on strengthening international trade oversight.

The French side still expect the text to signal support for "rules-based" multilateral cooperation rather than for Trump's preference for bilateral deals with American partners designed to reduce US trade deficits. 

Trump was upbeat, however, arguing that he could tell from the smiles of European leaders around the table that they knew that "the gig is up" and that they would be obliged to negotiate terms with Washington. 

"They can't believe they got away with it," he declared, repeating his mantra that G-7 members have been taking advantage of the naivety of his predecessors for decades.

"We want and expect other nations to provide fair market access to American exports and... we will take whatever steps are necessary to protect industry and workers from unfair practices, of which there are many. 

"But we're getting them worked out, slowly but surely."

The text of the annual G-7 joint communique is usually all but final before the leaders meet for two days of glad-handing and group photo opportunities, but this year officials were negotiating even as Trump headed for his plane.

If the G-7 fails to agree a final communique — or if it is watered down too far for the sake of appeasing the "America First" economic agenda — Canada's G-7 will be remembered mainly for fierce disagreements over Trump's tariffs and his surprise request to return Russia to the fold. 

While diplomats wrangled in private, summit host Prime Minister Justin Trudeau gathered the other leaders for a breakfast session on women's equality. Trump arrived 17 minutes after the planned 8:00am start time and after Trudeau's opening remarks. He was seated next to a luminary of the multilateral system, IMF Director Christine Lagarde.

Even before he flew out of Washington on Friday to hook up with the rest of the group, Trump managed to rile his counterparts by declaring that it was time that Russia be brought back into the G-7. The idea was swiftly shot down.

With his wife Melania back home in Washington, Trump cut a lonely figure on arrival at the golf resort in rural Quebec as he posed with his host Trudeau and his wife Sophie and other first couples.

He was then confronted with a litany of complaints over his decision to impose tariffs on imports of steel and aluminum when the leaders held roundtable talks chaired by Trudeau.

A member of Macron's team characterised the talks as "frank and robust", with Trump first repeating his lengthy diatribe about what he regards as unfair trade restrictions — before the Europeans responded with facts and figures they felt would blunt his argument.

 

 Quest for a

 joint statement 

 

Trudeau told Trump that it was "unacceptable" to cite national security when targeting a military ally like Canada with tariffs. 

"The Prime Minister pressed the President to reconsider the US tariffs imposed on Canadian steel and aluminum, and encouraged him to work with Canada to address unfair trade," Trudeau's office said.

The summit was wrapping up just as Chinese President Xi Jinping begins hosting the leaders of Russia and Iran at a two-day regional security meeting in a symbol of the power-play between East and West.

Chile celebrates World Environment Day

By - Jun 10,2018 - Last updated at Jun 10,2018

AMMAN — Chile’s President Sebastián Piñera participated in World Environment Day with a ceremony that celebrated the recent passing of a law to eliminate the use of plastic bags nationwide, placing Chile at the cutting edge in Latin America in the area of ecology, according to a statement received by The Jordan Times.

Accompanied by Environment Minister Marcela Cubillos, the president walked through a 15-metre-long tunnel lined with plastic bags that had been installed in Plaza de la Ciudadanía to raise awareness of ecological damage.

He emphasised that the country produces over 3.4 billion plastic bags each year. Each has a useful life of 30 minutes but takes 400 years to biodegrade, “causing harm to our environment and our nature”.

Prohibiting the use of plastic bags in shops was the first government project to be approved by Congress with broad support.

“Chile is showing that it is a responsible country that is committed to the environment. We need to move away from the idea that everything is disposable and go back to a healthier culture in which items can be reused or recycled,” the president said, according to the statement.

Switzerland votes on whether to stop banks’ money making machine

By - Jun 08,2018 - Last updated at Jun 08,2018

Swiss 1,000-franc notes are seen in this picture illustration taken on February 16, 2016 (Reuters file photo)

ZURICH — Supporters of a radical scheme to upend Switzerland’s financial system have made an 11th hour appeal to voters to approve a proposal to strip banks of the power to create new money through lending.

Postal voting, which accounts for the majority of participation in Swiss referenda, is under way in the so-called Sovereign Money initiative, with the polls closing on Sunday.

Contrary to common belief, most money in the world is not produced by central banks, but is instead created by commercial lenders when they lend beyond the deposits they hold for savers.

This arrangement, underpinned by the belief that most debts will be repaid, has been a cornerstone of the global capitalist system, but opponents say it is unstable because the new money created exceeds economic growth. 

Swiss campaigners want to replace this approach, where banks regularly roll over their financing of loans, with a system of “Vollgeld” — which can be translated to “real money”. 

“A large majority of people in Switzerland don’t want commercial banks to produce money out of nothing and believe only the SNB should have the right to create money in Switzerland — this is their chance to make this happen,” said Raffael Wuethrich, one of the campaign’s leaders said.

The Sovereign Money initiative would allow banks only to give credit to customers using funds they have from long term customer deposits, the Swiss National Bank (SNB) or money markets.

“Our opponents have tried to make people afraid and insecure about our plans, but when people find these fears are unfounded they are coming over to our side,” said Wuethrich.

If the Swiss vote “yes”, the law introducing “real money” would be written into the country’s constitution. It would then fall to the government to work out how to introduce it within three years. The referendum is in part the result of growing frustration in traditionally banker-friendly Switzerland with the financial sector, after the government bailed out the country’s biggest lender UBS in 2008.

This, along with rock bottom interest rates for savers and sky-high pay packets for finance executives, has opened the way for a vote which could turn back the clock 100 years to when the SNB created most of the money used in the country.

“The banks have too much influence in Switzerland,” said Julian Baecker, a post-graduate student. “They have a lot of power without responsibilities. For example, the taxpayer had to pay for their mistakes during the financial crisis.

“I think the Swiss people are more critical about banks than they used to be and something needs to change.”

One sovereign money supporter questioned why banks have the right to create money. “This kind of privilege often promotes riskier business models,” said Marti Alder.

If voters back the campaign, Switzerland would become the world’s first country to adopt a sovereign money system, where the SNB will be the only authority allowed to create money in the country and banks will be barred from creating money when they make loans.

One early poll had shown 44 per cent of voters backing the initiative but support has slipped to 34 per cent ahead of the vote. 

Sovereign money is full-value legal tender which is created and brought into circulation by public institutions, typically a central bank, rather than commercial banks. 

Currently, coins and banknotes are the only forms of sovereign money available to the public, although the term also applies to deposits held on site by the commercial banks with the central bank. 

Only around ten per cent of the Swiss money supply is created by the SNB at present, compared with 90 per cent created electronically by the commercial banks, the campaigners say.

Their proposal aims to guard against bank runs by giving customers access to “full money” accounts — which will be off the commercial banks’ balance sheets and backed with central bank money.

Opponents have said the plan could lead to higher bank charges, strangle access to credit and weigh on Switzerland’s economic growth. 

The initiative has been opposed by the Swiss government and the SNB, which has described the plan as an “unnecessary and dangerous experiment”.

The fact that a referendum is taking place has unnerved some investors. 

“It will be a catastrophe on every level,” said Marie Owens Thomsen, global head of economic research at Indosuez Wealth Management, commenting on the possibility of a “yes” vote.

But campaigners remain undeterred.

“Of course the banks and financial institutions are against changing the system because they benefit overwhelmingly from it at present,” the campaign’s Wuethrich told Reuters.

“We hope that people can see through the scaremongering and decide to have real money in their accounts instead of a token from the banks,” he said.

Investors have been buying up insurance against swings in the Swiss franc and the shares of the biggest Swiss lenders to hedge against turbulence if the vote is approved.

“Switzerland would be hit by a monetary revolution. We talk about banks, but the real concern is the whole economy,” the Swiss Bankers Association Chief Economist Martin Hess said. 

Ratings agency S&P Global said a win for sovereign money scheme could result in uncertainty among banks and investors.

“If we see increasing funding risk or investors questioning banks’ ability to adapt to a potential new regime, a transition to a sovereign money system could have an immediate effect on outstanding Swiss bank ratings,” it said in a report published this week.

“In the long term, the introduction of a sovereign money system could weaken Swiss banks’ profitability and raise questions about their future business model.”

US, China reach $1.4b sanctions deal over ZTE

By - Jun 08,2018 - Last updated at Jun 08,2018

In this photo taken on May 2, the ZTE logo is seen on a building in Beijing (AFP file photo)

WASHINGTON — Washington and Beijing have reached a deal to ease sanctions that brought Chinese smartphone maker ZTE to the brink of collapse, the US Commerce Department announced on Thursday.

The agreement also follows a reported offer by Beijing to ramp up purchases of American goods and thereby drive down the yawning trade deficit between the world’s two largest economies — moving part-way towards meeting a key demand of US President Donald Trump in ongoing trade talks.

ZTE will pay a $1 billion penalty, and put another $400 million in escrow to cover possible future violations before being stricken from a sanctions list.

Under the deal, the Chinese giant will also have to change its entire board of directors and retain outside legal compliance specialists who will report to the Commerce Department for ten years.

Total US penalties imposed on ZTE now amount to $2.3 billion, according to the US Commerce Department.

In April, the Chinese group was cut off from US technology products for violating US sanctions against North Korea and Iran — measures which threatened to put ZTE out of business.

Washington lawmakers were indignant last month after Trump offered to rescue ZTE as a personal favor to Chinese President Xi Jinping — even though the company is widely considered a liability for US national cybersecurity.

 

‘A pretty strict settlement’ 

 

Democrat and Republican senators denounced Trump’s offer to ease the ZTE sanctions as an offer that imposed punitive measures the company had already disregarded once before, while garnering no true concessions from China.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross told CNBC on Thursday the deal was tough and would keep ZTE on a short leash.

“This is a pretty strict settlement. The strictest and largest settlement fine that has ever been brought by the Commerce Department against any violator of export controls.”

Several US lawmakers have warned against easing sanctions on ZTE, citing national security concerns.

The news comes as Trump presses ahead with plans to impose as much as $50 billion in tariffs on Chinese imports to punish Beijing for its alleged theft of American technology and know-how.

Washington and Beijing have pursued a halting series of trade talks, with Trump demanding a $200 billion reduction in its yawning trade deficit with China.

Ross told CNBC the ZTE deal was an enforcement matter that was unrelated to the trade talks, which he has led. 

But it came shortly after Chinese officials offered to buy an additional $70 billion in US goods to cut the trade deficit, moving towards meeting one of Trump’s central demands on trade.

Egyptians suffer austerity squeeze as economy stabilises

By - Jun 07,2018 - Last updated at Jun 07,2018

People ride a train at a metro station in the Egyptian capital, Cairo, on May 28 (AFP photo)

CAIRO —  While Egypt's economy is displaying the green shoots of recovery, citizens are enduring relentless price rises covering everything from water to metro tickets.

At Cairo's El Zahraa metro station, nestled among red-brick apartment blocks in a middle income neighbourhood, 46-year-old Omm Mohamed laments the government's economic overhaul.

"The burden has become too heavy, it has become unbearable," she said, dressed in a black full-length dress with her hair covered.

Standing alongside her teenage son, Mohamed said she was especially worried about her daughter who takes the metro to work at a private hospital.

"The rise in ticket prices has hit her especially, with her modest salary," she said.

On top of the metro fare, Mohamed's daughter is one of many Cairo residents who has to take tuk-tuks and microbuses to work. 

On May 11 a uniform two-pound ($0.11) metro ticket was replaced with fares ranging from three to seven pounds. Barely a year ago, fares cost just one pound.

The latest fare rises brought street protests last month.

Around 30 people were arrested in the May protest, with some later freed.

 

'The burden will double' 

 

Egypt's austerity policies are tied to $12 billion in loans from the International Monetary Fund, secured by Cairo to ease a fiscal crisis that saw its deficit balloon to 12.5 per cent of GDP in 2015/16.

On Saturday, the government announced a hike in drinking water prices that in some cases exceed 45 per cent.

Further measures are to come, with energy prices due to rise in July.

"The burden will double," said Mohamed.

Seeking to cut the country's deficit, authorities have also introduced a value-added tax, cut fuel subsidies and increased electricity prices.

Officials are repeatedly warning of more electricity price hikes and a reduction in fuel subsidies, prompting media outlets to prepare the public for the changes.

Last week state-run Al Ahram newspaper ran a front page about the price of oil, stating fuel subsidies cost the public purse 104 billion pounds annually. 

The government has yet to announce the scale of the next price increase and cut in subsidies.

But Alia El Mahdi, an economics professor at Cairo University, said the metro protest set off "alarm bells".

"The Egyptian people have suffered many shocks in the last two years in consecutive price increases," she said.

The metro ticket change alone saw transport costs jump from five or six per cent of poor Egyptians' total spending to 20 per cent, Mahdi explained.

 

 

'Sacrifices' required 

 

The rising costs come against a backdrop of economic recovery, with GDP growth increasing in the past year from 4.2 per cent to 5.2 per cent. 

Meanwhile, inflation eased to 12.9 per cent in April, after reaching a peak of 34.2 per cent last July.

The unemployment rate dropped to 10.6 per cent in the first three months of 2018, against 12 per cent a year earlier, according to the government's statistics bureau.

Despite the positive figures for the national economy, price rises have disproportionately affected low earners according to Omar Adly from the American University in Cairo.

"There are other means to reduce the budget deficit which could reduce the pressures on the poor and lower middle income-class," such as tax rises, said Adly, a development professor.

But the IMF contends that the bitter reform medicine will benefit everyone.

"While the process has required sacrifices in the short-term, the reforms were critical to stabilise the economy," the lender said on May 17.

Such an economic overhaul will "lay the foundation for strong and sustained growth that will improve living standards for all Egyptians", the IMF added.

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF