Egypt’s balance of payments deficit (BoP) leaped a whopping 260% in the first nine months of the current fiscal year due to ongoing fall of tourism receipts, services income and transfers, the Central Bank of Egypt said Sunday.
The overall BoP deficit reached $3.6 billion from July to March in the fiscal year 2015-2016, compared to $1 billion in the same period of the previous year as the current account deficit rose by around 75% to reach $14.5 billion from $8.3 billion, Albawaba reported.
Tourism revenues dropped by 40% to $3.3 billion from $5.5 billion during July-March compared to the previous year, according to the CBE.
The trade deficit shrunk slightly during the period in spite of declining export proceeds, falling to $29.3 billion from $29.5 billion as world oil prices declined, the CBE said.
Export proceeds retreated by $3.7 billion to register a total of $13.4 billion during the same period, the bank said in an official release. Non-oil exports rolled back by $1 billion to stand at $9.2 billion.
However, the import bill dropped by around 8% to $42.7 billion from $46.6 billion as the value of both oil and non-oil imports dropped.
According to CBE, the services surplus narrowed by 43.4% to $2.4 billion from $4.3 billion over the first three quarters of the current fiscal year.
Net official transfers (which include foreign aid bar loans) plummeted to $60.7 million from $2.6 billion as remittances of Egyptian workers overseas declined to $12.4 billion from $14.3 billion.