An international credit rating agency says Egypt’s economy has started to improve but has yet to recover from the 2011 uprising and the years of unrest that followed, AP reported. In a Tuesday report, Moody’s hailed recent economic and fiscal reforms, saying they point to “improved government effectiveness and policy predictability,” but said weak finances remain a “key challenge” for the government. Egypt embarked on an ambitious economic reform plan shortly after President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi took office in 2014. The government has slashed subsidies, imposed a value-added tax and allowed currency devaluation in order to qualify for a $12 billion bailout loan from the International Monetary Fund. The agency, which has a B3 stable rating on Egypt’s government finances, said that official government figures indicate that the country achieved GDP growth of 4.2% last year. It expects this to increase to 5% by 2019, driven mainly by private consumption. It said there had been a negative impact on tourism as a result of “heightened domestic political instability” following the 2011 revolution.
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