Dr. Rania Al-Mashat welcomes the new Regional Director for the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean Region of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development to discuss partnership initiatives
20 January 2025
Al-Mashat reviews the Framework for Sustainability and Financing for Economic Development and efforts to enhance macroeconomic stability.
Discussions on enhancing future partnerships to continue implementing the "NWFE" program and priority projects.
Dr. Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic
Development, and International Cooperation and Egypt’s Governor at the European
Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), received Mr. Mark Davis, the
new Regional Director for the Southern and Eastern Mediterranean Region at the
EBRD, succeeding Dr. Heike Harmgart. The two sides discussed joint cooperation
initiatives, reviewed key projects undertaken over the past year, and explored
future collaboration prospects. The meeting was attended by officials from the
EBRD and the ministry’s team.
At the beginning of the meeting, Dr. Rania Al-Mashat
congratulated Mr. Davis on his new position as Managing Director for the
Southern and Eastern Mediterranean Region at the EBRD, expressing her
appreciation for the fruitful strategic relations with the bank, considering
Egypt a founding member. She highlighted the ongoing development of these
relations since Egypt became an EBRD country of operations in 2012, leading to
increased investment flows to both the public and private sectors, reaching
approximately €13.8 billion in 194 projects, with more than 84% of these funds
directed to the private sector. This reflects confidence in the Egyptian
economy and contributes to achieving the country’s development goals.
Al-Mashat outlined the
Framework for Sustainability and Financing for Economic Development,
which the ministry launched following the recent government reshuffle. This
framework aims to maximize the use of planning tools, elements of the Economic
and Social Development Plan, and external resources from development partners
to support Egypt’s Vision 2030. The goal is to achieve qualitative and
sustainable growth by focusing on three pillars:
● Formulating Data-Driven & Evidence-Based Economic
Development Policy informs educated discussions about the needs and
opportunities in areas such as human
capital, industrial development, SMEs, technology, entrepreneurship,
sustainable infrastructure, green investments, among others, while ensuring
robust monitoring and evaluation mechanisms to track progress and optimize
outcomes.
● Building a
Future-Resilient Economy advances macroeconomic stability through the
implementation of structural reforms to foster
economic competitiveness, macro-fiscal resilience and the green
transition.
● Optimizing
Resource Allocation by adopting an integrated national financing framework that
mobilizes domestic and international financing, thus allocating resources to
priority sectors and supporting SDG acceleration.
She also noted the ministry’s efforts in collaboration with
development partners, using economic diplomacy to drive financing for
development. Over the past four years, Egypt’s private sector secured about
$14.5 billion in concessional financing. Al-Mashat highlighted the strategic
partnership with the European Union, particularly developments last year in the
Macro-Financial Assistance (MFA) program, which addresses budget support.
Negotiations for the second phase, worth €4 billion, are set to begin soon,
alongside a €1.8 billion investment guarantee mechanism.
The Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and
International Cooperation added that the current government is working to
strengthen macroeconomic stability efforts and continue implementing structural
reforms that stimulate private sector activity and create a favorable
investment climate. The government also plans to proceed with the state
ownership policy program to maximize returns from state-owned assets.
Al-Mashat noted that EBRD’s investments in Egypt last year
reflect the bank’s significant confidence in the Egyptian economy and the
attractiveness of local and foreign private sector companies for external
financing. She also emphasized the success of the state’s efforts, particularly
in renewable energy sector reforms, which enabled the bank, as a key partner in
the energy pillar of the "NWFE" country platform, to attract
innovative financing for various projects.
She further noted that the relationship between Egypt and
the EBRD has advanced significantly over the past five years, working together
across various levels to pave the way for achieving Egypt’s targeted
development rates. This relationship reflects the ongoing progress in
cooperation and the success in building strong and influential partnerships.
The meeting also included discussions on enhancing
cooperation with the bank in the fields of green financing and renewable
energy, as these sectors represent the future of development in Egypt.
Additionally, discussions covered transportation and preparing public-private
partnership (PPP) projects, reaffirming the importance of continuing to open
avenues of cooperation between the private sectors of both sides, given their
vital role in supporting development efforts.
At the end of the meeting, both sides emphasized the
importance of joint work and coordination to boost investments and meet Egypt’s
development needs, with a commitment to strengthening the strategic partnership
between Egypt and the EBRD.