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Forecasts
& Strategies
Personal Snapshots
June 2001
Whatever
Happened to the Egyptians?
By Mark Skousen
Governments
are generally reluctant to admit mistakes and to change mistaken
policies until much harm has been done. -P.T. Bauer and
B.S. Yamey
In
Whatever Happened to the Egyptians?, a popular book
in Egypt, author Galan Amin raises a good question. Thousands
of years ago, Egypt was the birthplace of one of the world's
greatest civilizations, with remarkable advances in architecture,
astronomy, mathematics and economics, and the pharaohs ruled
the world for centuries.
But
today Egypt is a fallen nation. My family and I visited Egypt
for the first time last month, and we were appalled. Arriving
in Cairo to see the ancient pyramids, we also saw filthy canals,
undrinkable water, dire poverty, noisy traffic, teeming millions,
incessant vendors and dust everywhere (due to cement factories
nearby).
I
picked up a copy of a guidebook on what it’s like for a Westerner
to live in Cairo. The author, Claire Francy, lists so many
shortages that she urges foreign residents to bring the following
with them: answering machines, major appliances, computers,
modems, printers, telephones, fax machines, cosmetics, flashlights,
pantyhose, wines, books in English, clothes and shoes. Yes,
shoes. "In a city with nearly as many shoe stores as feet,
it is almost impossible to find decent shoes." Oh, the joys
of import substitution laws!
And
yet, Egypt has tremendous resources: oil, cotton, some of
the best fertile land in the world along the Nile Valley,
a first-rate irrigation system, the Suez Canal, and a huge
labor force (nearly 70 million and the population is growing
rapidly, despite the common practice of female circumcision,
which leaves women without sexual feeling but not without
children). Yet true unemployment is 20% and underemployment
is endemic. Egypt suffers from a huge "brain drain," with
2.5 million Egyptians working abroad. The nation has illiteracy
rates of 66% among women and 37% among men. It imports half
of its food. After Israel, this Arab-African nation is the
highest recipient of U.S. foreign aid in the world.
Anti-Market
Policies
What's
the cause of this demise? The culprit is socialist interventionism
in the economy. As one economist states, "The Egyptian economy
bears the legacy of economic policies dating from the 1950s
which were motivated by concern for equity and assistance
to the poor. These policies were characterized by price regulation,
subsidization of consumer goods, a dominant public sector
and state control." When Gamal Nasser gained power in 1954,
he established a "democratic socialist state" and nationalized
everything under the sun (including the local beer company)
and dramatically increased government control of the economy.
Moreover, under a Napoleonic code, Egypt suffers from a regulatory
nightmare of paperwork and bureaucracy.
[Insert
graphic here]
At
the Egyptian pyramids with my daughter Hayley.
Fortunately,
Nasser's replacement, Anwar Sadat, began a program of reducing
the role of government. After his tragic assassination in
1981, his successor, Hosni Mubarak, has accelerated market
policies of privatization and foreign investment, and eliminated
price and exchange controls. Yet, even today, 36% of the labor
force is employed by the government, and the economy continues
to suffer from overregulation and controls.
Egypt
has made substantial progress since 1990, when the Fraser
Institute ranked it #88 in its Economic Freedom report. Today
it is ranked #52. But clearly the Egyptian leaders have a
long way to go to fulfill the Koran's promise of "wealth and
children" as the "adornments of this present life."
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