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Business council head urges more Turkey, Egypt trade

Business council head urges more Turkey, Egypt trade

Business council head urges more Turkey, Egypt tradeBy Dilara Zengin,

Ankara: Economic relations between Turkey and Egypt should be above politics, according to Foreign Economic Relations Board (DEIK) Turkey-Egypt Business Council head Muhammet Mesut Toprak on Wednesday.

Toprak told Anadolu Agency Turkish companies have almost $2-billion worth of investments in Egypt.

“We hope investments and cooperation between the two countries will increase as part of goodwill.

“For Turkey, Egypt opens door to Africa and for Egypt, Turkey is a door to Europe,” the council head added.

He emphasized Turkey-Egypt relations should be restructured and a new page in the relations should be turned.

Egypt is marking the seventh anniversary of its Arab Spring, which began on Jan. 25, 2011, at Tahrir Square.

Trade volume between Turkey and Egypt between 2011 and 2016 went up by 1 percent to reach $4.2 billion, according to IMF data.

In 2011, when the Arab Spring began, the size of Egyptian economy was $247.7 billion. The country’s gross domestic product increased by 34.2 percent to rise to $332.4 billion in 2016.

Having the third-biggest economy after Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates (UAE) among Arab countries, Egypt was unable to reach its 5.1 percent growth performance that the country showed in 2010, one year before the Arab Spring.

In 2011, Egyptian economy’s growth pace was 1.8 percent; this rate was up to 4.3 percent in 2016.

Exports to Egypt $2.1B

The IMF says the country’s 2017 growth is expected to be at 4.1 percent.

Egypt’s inflation rate in 2011 tallied 11.1 percent in 2011; however, it went down to 10.2 percent in 2016. This figure is expected to be 23.5 percent in 2017 as well.

Populated by 96.4 million people, Egypt’s unemployment rate rose to 12.7 percent in 2016. This rate was 10.4 percent in 2011.

After the Arab Spring and the coup term, the country’s foreign debt increased. Egyptian Finance Ministry data shows the country’s foreign debt increased by 41.7 percent as of June 2017 compared with the previous year, boosting to $79 billion from $55.8 billion.

Meanwhile, Egypt’s exports in 2011 were worth $31.6 billion. Egyptian exports decreased to $22.5 billion in 2016.

The country’s imports also went down between 2011 and 2016 by 7 percent and in 2016 they were worth $58.1 billion.

Egypt’s foreign trade volume, which was $93.9 billion in 2011, decreased by 14 percent and became $80.6 billion in 2016.

According to Turkish Statistical Institute data, foreign debt volume between Turkey and Egypt reached $4.2 billion in 2016, increasing 1 percent. In 2011, when the Arab Spring began, this figure was $4.1 billion.

In this term, Turkey’s exports to Egypt went down by 1 percent and in 2016 they decreased to $2.7 billion. However, the imports from Egypt rose to $1.4 billion by increasing 4.4 percent.

Also, Turkey’s exports to Egypt in the first 11 months of 2017 tallied $2.1 billion. In the same term, imports from Egypt were worth $1.8 billion. Thus, the foreign trade volume between Turkey and Egypt was calculated at $3.9 billion during the first 11 months of 2017.

—AA

Etihad Air:founding member India-UAE Business Council

Etihad Air:founding member India-UAE Business Council

etihad airMumbai:(IANS) United Arab Emirates’ national carrier Etihad  Airways on Friday said it has been named one of the founding members of  the just inaugurated India-UAE Joint Business Council.

“India is a crucial market not only for Etihad Airways but the UAE itself and therefore we welcomed the opportunity to become a founding member of the UAE Business Council in India,” Etihad president and chief executive James Hogan said in a statement here.

“Our strategic partnership with Jet Airways means both airlines are now carrying greater numbers of business and leisure travellers between the UAE and India,” he added.

External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj and UAE Foreign Minister Sheikh Abdullah Bin Zayed Al-Nahyan inaugurated the council on Thursday, after they held the 11th session of the India-UAE Joint Commission Meeting for  Technical and Economical Cooperation in New Delhi.

Speaking at a bilateral business meet in New Delhi organised by industry chamber CII on Thursday, UAE Minister of State for Foreign Affairs Reem Ibrahim Al Hashimi said the fact that 1,000 flights per week connect both countries demonstrates the intensity of the relationship.

“The UAE leadership is committed to take our bilateral relationship to a  new level of strategic co-operation,” she said.

UAE has an important place in India’s energy security as the sixth largest import-source of crude oil in 2014-15.

Bilateral trade has grown significantly from a level of $180 million in the 1970s to around $60 billion per annum now, making the UAE India’s third-largest trading partner for 2014-15 after China and the US.