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Hossam el-Hamalawy

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Hossam el-Hamalawy

Tag: neoliberalism

More price increases?

Posted on 05/05/200812/01/2021 By 3arabawy

I’ve just received this message from a journalist friend in Cairo three minutes ago:

GOVERNMENT ABOUT TO RAISE PRICES ON CAR FUEL!! ALL KINDS!!! ALSO CIGARETTES, CAR LICENSING FEES, ETC. PARLIAMENT DISCUSSING LIVE ON TV, Ahmad EZZ ANNOUNCING DECISIONS, BROTHERHOOD AND INDEPENDENTS ALMOST RIOTING IN ASSEMBLY, TRYING TO SHOUT EZZ DOWN, FATHI SUROUR TRYING TO SHUT THEM UP. DECISION SEEMS TO HAVE ALREADY BEEN TAKEN, BUT WAITING OFFICIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. TRANSMISSION JUST CUT, REVERTED TO STUDIO BECAUSE IT WAS TOO EMBARRASSING.

UPDATE: An hour later I received this message from the same journalist friend:

Decision expected sometime this afternoon. Imported cigarettes to increase up to 33%, ceiling of 25 piastre increase on local cigarettes like Cleopatra. Price increase on natural gas to heavy-use industries. 90 octane gas for cars to increase to 175 piastres, 92 octane to increase to 185, 95 octane to 275, solar to increase to 110 piastres from 75, same for kerosene. Tax breaks removed from private schools and educational institutions, licensing fees for motorcycles, trucks, pickup trucks, private cars to increase. For private cars its staggered, so for cars less than 1030 ccs, currently 16 pounds, will increase to 116 pounds. At the highest end of the scale, cars more than 2030 ccs will increase to 2 percent of the car’s value, with a lower limit of 1000 pounds. Licenses for trucks, currently between 50 and 500 pounds, to increase to between 500 to 2000 pounds. Some heavy industries will be hit, like steel projects, fertlizers, petroleum, etc with removal of tax breaks.

UPDATE: The MB Parliamentarians are holding a press conference today 3pm:

دعـــوة
تدعوكم الكتلة البرلمانية للإخوان المسلمين بمجلس الشعب المصري لحضور المؤتمر الصحفي بشان ”
زيادة أسعار المحروقات والسجائر وتراخيص السيارات لتعويض نسبة الـ30% التي أعلن عنها الرئيس مبارك ”
وذلك اليوم الاثنين 5/5/2008 في الساعة الثالثة ظهر اليوم أمام البوابة رقم 3 بمجلس الشعب .
أ.د محمد سعد الكتاتنى
رئيس الكتلة البرلمانية للإخوان المسلمين
—
خبر صحفي
يعقد نواب الإخوان والمستقلين والمعارضة مؤتمراً صحفياً في الساعة الثالثة ظهر اليوم أمام البوابة رقم 3 بمجلس الشعب رداً على زيادة أسعار المحروقات والسجائر وتراخيص السيارات لتعويض نسبة الـ30% التى أعلن عنها الرئيس مبارك، حيث فوجئ النواب بتقرير سري للجنة الخطة والموازنة لم يعرض على اعضاء اللجنة أنفسهم، بل لم يعقد في المجلس أصلاً، وهو التقرير الذي يشمل ارتفاعات تصل إلى 40% في أسعار المحروقات .
وقال النائب حسين محمد إبراهيم نائب رئيس الكتلة والمتحدث الرسمي أنهم سيعقدون المؤتمر الصحفي رداً على طريقة اعداد اللجنة التقرير فضلا عن الزيادات التي تطلبها الحكومة لرفع الاسعار بهذا الشكل الجنوني .
وقد شهدت الجلسة العامة لمجلس الشعب صباح اليوم مناقشات ساخنة وعنيفة بين نواب الاخوان والمعارضة والمستقلين وعدد من نواب الحزب الوطني، في مقابل نواب الأغلبية الذين ايدوا قررات الحكومة بشدة ، وقد أدى موقف الاخوان والمعارضة والمستقلين إلى فشل مجلس الشعب في أخذ الموافقة على هذه التعديلات في جلسة سريعة مما دفع الدكتور فتحي سرور إلى الاعلان على أنه سيتم تخصيص الجلستين الاولى والثانية لسماع آراء النواب.

UPDATE: Here’s a report from Reuters.

Food crisis in Mubarak’s Egypt

Posted on 01/05/200820/04/2015 By 3arabawy

Mubarak proposes 30% public sector pay rise

Posted on 30/04/200812/01/2021 By 3arabawy

The dictator gave his May Day speech. Here’s a Reuters report, by Jonathan Wright:

CAIRO, April 30 – Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, responding to unrest over low salaries and high food prices, proposed on Wednesday a salary increase of about 30 percent for public sector employees.
In a May Day speech to trade unionists, he told his government to find the extra revenue it will need to cover the cost, expected to be about 9 billion Egyptian pounds ($1.7 billion) above what it had planned in its draft 2008/9 budget.
“It will be about 30 percent,” said Mubarak, whose government faces the possibility of a stay-at-home protest by leftists, liberals and Islamists on May 4, his 80th birthday.
Instead of waiting for the start of the 2008/9 financial year on July 1, the government should try to pay the salary increases as soon as possible, Mubarak said.
“I ask the government and the parliament to agree quickly on the best options … to make available real resources so that we can go ahead with implementation with effect from May,” he said.
Tamer Waguih, an activist with the opposition group Kefaya, said Mubarak had made the offer to placate the angry poor.
“This is a measure in an attempt to preserve his regime. It is not related to love of the poor or any social agenda… He has been advised that the country, the working classes and the poor, are going to explode,” he added.
Mubarak did not elaborate on the effect on next year’s budget, which in draft form allows for a 15 percent increase in the government’s salary bill and a budget deficit equivalent to 6.9 percent of gross domestic product.
The government, on the defensive after a wave of strikes and protests, had already promised the annual rise would be higher.
Urban inflation in the year to March hit 14.4 percent, the highest rate in three years. The poorest Egyptians, including the many low-paid civil servants, have been hit hardest because they spend a much greater proportion of their incomes on food.
DIALOGUE ON REVENUE
In the year to March, bread and grain prices soared 48.1 percent, fruit and vegetable prices rose by over 20 percent, and edible oils were up 45.2 percent.
Tax Commissioner and Deputy Finance Minister Ashraf Al Arabi said the salary increase would probably be across the board and the intention was to find all the additional revenue needed so that the budget would remain at the same level.
“Things are going to happen in the upcoming 10 days. The government and the parliament will sit down for a dialogue to find real resources,” he told Reuters.
Waguih said Mubarak’s proposal could embolden the political forces behind the call for a general strike on Sunday, backed by Kefaya and the influential Muslim Brotherhood.
“People will conclude the government is weak, so they will be more courageous… But I don’t think that May 4 will be a strong event because no workers group are backing it,” he added.
The Brotherhood, the main opposition force in Egypt , joined on Tuesday the campaign for the strike, which began as a proposal by leftist and liberal activists.
The activists tried to organize a general strike on April 6, to coincide with a strike by textile workers in the Nile Delta, but the response in Cairo and other cities was muted.
Mubarak also proposed an overhaul of the government’s subsidies policy, which weighs heavily on the government budget.
In 2008/9 the government will spend 20 billion Egyptian pounds on food subsidies and 63 billion on fuel subsidies, he said. The comparative figures for 2007/8, which ends on June 30, are 15 billion and 57 billion.
“These (fuel subsidies) go to those who can pay rather than to those who cannot. This requires a review of the correct situation, but gradually,” Mubarak said.
Reham El-Desoki, senior economist at investment bank Beltone Financial, said the impact on inflation would be limited because civil servants have little purchasing power.
“Most government employees are so underpaid that a wage increase of this magnitude is overdue,” she said. “They have a right to start banging their fists against the wall and demanding higher pay because they are getting peanuts.”
Egyptian civil service salaries start at a low of about 300 pounds ($56) a month.
($1 = 5.37 Egyptian pounds)

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