This paper develops an analytical framework to explain why Egypt has been trapped in a prolonged state of “permacrisis” since the early 1950s, characterized by recurring economic challenges and an inability to achieve sustainable, inclusive growth. The framework integrates three interconnected factors that have perpetuated Egypt’s economic stagnation: the persistence of flawed economic policies (“bad ideas”), reactive crisis management approaches, and entrenched political economy dynamics that concentrate power and resist meaningful reform. The analysis reveals that Egypt’s economic trajectory has been marked by volatile boom-bust cycles, with growth averaging only 4% annually since the 2008 global financial crisis—not sufficient to meaningfully improve living standards. Key structural imbalances persist, including chronic savings-investment gaps, export-import deficits, and government revenue-expenditure shortfalls. These vulnerabilities have been exacerbated by the persistence of misguided policies such as excessive energy subsidies, price controls, fixed exchange rate regimes, and over-reliance on public sector employment. Unlike successful emerging economies that leveraged crises as catalysts for structural reform, Egypt has not been able to implement comprehensive changes, instead reverting to short-term stabilization measures. Building on this analytical framework, the paper concludes by outlining a comprehensive reform agenda emphasizing pragmatic governance, institutional strengthening, and strategic economic diversification to break Egypt’s cycle of permacrisis and achieve sustainable development.
Senior Associates
Mahmoud Mohieldin
Professor of Economics and Finance, Cairo University,...
Research Associates
Amira El-Shal
Associate Director of Research, J-PAL MENA
Research Associates
Eman Moustafa
Research Manager, African Export-Import Bank (Afreximbank)
