Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and International Cooperation Participates in the Second Edition of the Cairo Forum to Discuss the Future of the Global Economy and Multilateral Cooperation
04 November 2025
Organized by the Egyptian Center for Economic Studies (ECES)...
Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and International Cooperation Participates in the Second Edition of the Cairo Forum to Discuss the Future of the Global Economy and Multilateral Cooperation
Dr. Rania Al-Mashat:
Egypt has moved to expand innovative financing mechanisms to maximize benefit from partnerships with international institutions.
We adopt a new economic model through “Egypt’s Narrative for Economic Development”, led by the private sector and fostering productive and export-oriented investments.
We are working to expand private sector participation through innovative tools to mitigate risks in cooperation with international partners.
Stability and clear policies are two essential conditions for mobilizing finance and stimulating investment participation.
The challenge for developing countries is not so much finance as it is preparing investment-ready projects that incentivize private capital.
Country platforms are an effective tool for mobilizing investments and technical support in developing nations and emerging economies.
H.E. Dr. Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic
Development, and International Cooperation, participated in the second edition
of the “Cairo Forum”, organized by the Egyptian Center for Economic Studies
(ECES). This year's session discusses increasing global disruptions amid
geopolitical conflicts and deteriorating climate conditions, as well as the
future of the multilateral system and the global economy.
The Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and
International Cooperation spoke in the first panel discussion on "The
Shrinking Resources of Development Finance Institutions and the Threat Facing
the Implementation of Sustainable Development Goals, especially in
Africa."
Participants included Ms. Elena Panova, UN Resident
Coordinator in Egypt, Mr. Stephane Gimbert, Regional Director for Egypt, Yemen,
and Djibouti at the World Bank Group, Dr. Mark Davis, Managing Director of the
Southern and Eastern Mediterranean (SEMED) region at the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), and Dr. Nangula Nelulu Uaandja, CEO of
the Namibia Investment Promotion and Development Board (NIPDB). The session was
moderated by Eng. Tarek Tawfik, ECES Vice Chairman.
In her video address, Dr. Rania Al-Mashat explained that the
world today faces a new reality that impacts various countries across different
aspects, especially economic ones, particularly those countries that contribute
capital and set the priorities for multilateral institutions and development
finance institutions. This is evident in the decline of development finance for
developing and middle-income countries.
Dr. Al-Mashat pointed out that with the rising cost of
borrowing due to successive global shocks, directing resources toward enhancing
private sector investments has become a fundamental priority. This underscores
the importance of partnerships between development finance institutions,
governments, and the private sector to mobilize more resources and align
national priorities with global goals.
Dr. Al-Mashat noted that the real challenge is not
financing, but it is essential to employ the technical expertise of
multilateral development banks to support developing countries in raising their
capacities in project design and preparation in a way that incentivizes private
capital to engage in these projects.
Minister Al-Mashat mentioned the concept of "Global
Public Good," which refers to solutions implemented by countries where the
return extends beyond national borders to the regional and international
levels, thereby supporting flexibility and resilience.
Dr. Al-Mashat also stressed the need for international
finance institutions to prioritize catalytic investments, in addition to
integrating climate adaptation and resilience into all investment portfolios of
international institutions. She emphasized the necessity of increasing
investment in human capital and ensuring that the investments of finance
institutions align with countries' priorities in education, health, and
training, linking financing to specific outputs and results.
Dr. Al-Mashat stated that there is a growing need for joint
financing mechanisms that pool the resources of finance institutions into
multi-asset funds, allowing for greater mobilization of private capital.
Furthermore, she highlighted the necessity of enhancing partnerships among
finance institutions, governments, civil society, and the private sector to
transform limited resources into long-term development outcomes.
In this context, she noted that the World Bank Group’s new
guarantees platform is an important tool for accelerating the pace of
investment attraction, reducing risks, and stimulating infrastructure and
climate projects more efficiently and transparently.
Dr. Al-Mashat also discussed Egypt's economic reform
experience, adding that through “Egypt's Narrative for Economic Development”,
the state aims to transition to a new economic model focused on productive and
export-oriented sectors, led by the private sector. In this context, the goal
is to increase the share of private sector investments to 66% of total
investments by 2030, and increase the private sector's contribution to the GDP
to 82%. She explained that the governance of public investments aims to
redirect capital while creating fiscal space for spending on health and
education and incentivizing the private sector.
Minister Al-Mashat mentioned that Egypt is working to expand
private sector participation through innovative risk-mitigation tools in
cooperation with development finance institutions. These include the World
Bank's unified guarantees platform, the investment guarantee mechanism with the
European Union, and the mechanism to incentivize Public-Private Partnership
(PPP) projects launched with the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development (EBRD).
In addition, Dr. Al-Mashat referred to the debt swap
mechanism with Germany and Italy, which has contributed to financing various
development projects in rural development, education, food security, and job
creation sectors. Recently, Egypt launched the first debt swap program with
China globally.
Dr. Al-Mashat concluded her speech by reiterating that
country platforms create a greater impact than individual projects by
mobilizing broad-scale financing and technical support. Furthermore, guarantees
incentivize private investments, enabling them to enter high-risk sectors, and
enhancing stability and policy clarity is an essential condition for the
financing mobilization process.
