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Al-Mashat promotes economic narrative to Japanese investors

Businessmen Team news 23 November 2025 12:47 PM
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Al-Mashat promotes economic narrative to Japanese investors

Dr. Rania Al-Mashat, Minister of Planning, Economic Development, and International Cooperation, participated via video conference in an extensive meeting with the Japanese business community and financial institutions, organized by the Egyptian Embassy in Tokyo. The session aimed to promote Egypt’s National Economic Development Narrative and showcase the positive developments and key indicators of the Egyptian economy.

Ambassador of Egypt to Japan, Ragy El-Etreby, and more than 40 representatives from Japanese businesses and financial institutions attended the meeting.

Minister Al-Mashat highlighted the evolution of Egyptian-Japanese relations into a comprehensive development partnership, moving beyond traditional bilateral cooperation.

She presented the "Egyptian Economic Development Narrative" (launched September 2025), a framework integrating Vision 2030, the government program, and sectoral strategies. This narrative aims to transition Egypt into a new, productivity-driven economic model based on export-oriented sectors, technology, innovation, and structural reforms for sustainable growth.

Al-Mashat affirmed that since 2014, Egypt has made unprecedented investments in infrastructure—including ports, logistics, sustainable transport networks, modernized electricity grids, and water management—creating a production-capable environment conducive to attracting investment.

Addressing challenges like the COVID-19 pandemic and capital flight, the Minister identified March 2024 as a critical turning point. This led to the adoption of disciplined fiscal and monetary policies, a clear ceiling on public investments, and genuine reforms that have initiated a strong economic recovery.

The National Economic Narrative focuses on export-oriented sectors and the real economy. It includes comprehensive, time-bound reforms in key areas: industry, trade, FDI attraction, labor market development, local manufacturing, improving the investment climate, and accelerating the green transition.

Key economic highlights and opportunities presented included economic complexity as Egypt ranks high on the Economic Complexity Index among 145 countries, reflecting the capacity of Egyptian industries to integrate technology and enhance production quality. Export support programs are now linked to this complexity to promote higher value-added goods.

The Minister invited the Japanese private sector to invest in the new economic model, prioritizing productive sectors, technology, and tourism. Egypt also ranks high in the Environmental Complexity Index, supported by renewable energy projects since 2014. Japanese companies have opportunities to invest in wind and solar power projects through the concessional financing platform "NWFE" (Nexus of Water, Food, and Energy). The Egyptian economy is one of the most diversified in the region, with competitive advantages in labor, geographic location, and a large domestic market, making it attractive for export-oriented industries. GDP growth, which remained at 2% during global shocks, has risen to 4.4% for the fiscal year, and 5% for the last quarter. Manufacturing, ICT, and tourism are the largest contributors to GDP.

Al-Mashat noted that private investments now account for approximately 60% of total investments, a direct result of placing a ceiling on public investments to create space for the private sector. Over the past five years, Egypt has mobilized more than $16 billion in concessional financing for the private sector. Any company looking to enter the Egyptian market should consider three factors: actual growth rates, ease of access to finance, and clarity of the economic reform agenda and government policies. Government efforts include launching the State-Owned Enterprises Unit, the role of the Sovereign Fund of Egypt, and the Government Offerings Unit, all governed by a clear structure to maximize returns on state assets. She also mentioned cooperation with the International Finance Corporation (IFC) to offer 11 airports to the private sector.

Minister Al-Mashat concluded by stressing the importance of disseminating Egypt's economic story through Japanese financial institutions and the business sector to showcase the country's transformation model, structural reforms, and accelerating growth trajectory, which reflects the Egyptian economy's capacity to recover and expand despite global challenges.