Description: This is
a VOA Special English Economics Report.
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Text:
Egypt is the biggest of the nations hit by recent
protests in North Africa and the Middle East. One of
the causes of this spreading wave of popular
dissatisfaction is a lack of economic progress.Egypt
is not a major oil exporter. Its economy is not big
enough to affect world economic growth. But
important pipelines cross Egypt. And Egypt controls
the Suez Canal. About eight percent of world
shipping passes through this link between Europe and
Asia. That includes two million barrels of oil each
day, mainly to Europe. Many experts say they expect
the canal to remain open. Still, concerns about the
Suez have pushed oil prices to their highest levels
since two thousand eight. Fariborz Ghadar heads the
Center for Global Business Studies at Penn State
University. He says poverty in Egypt remains high --
up to forty percent in some areas.Yet Egypt is not
alone. Foreign investors worry about corruption,
mismanagement and security problems across North
Africa and the Middle East. Every year millions of
young people enter the job market. Populations are
young and growing fast. In Egypt, the economy grew
about five percent last year -- too little growth to
create enough jobs. Fariborz Ghadar says the United
States in a good year creates fewer than two million
jobs. He says Europe and the US together generate
three million jobs. Middle Eastern countries have to
generate up to eight million jobs just to keep their
youth employed. Fariborz Ghadar says protests could
spread to bigger economies.He says the mismanagement
of the Iranian economy could cause protests by the
Iranian population because food prices and inflation
are increasing. In recent years, the World Bank has
praised Egypt for cutting barriers to trade. But
economist Deborah Hewitt at the College of William &
Mary in Virginia says private foreign investment
remains weak. She says those investments have grown
quickly from almost nothing eight years ago. But
they are still not enough to lift the economy.
Professor Hewitt says Egypt could look to reforms in
Morocco that have appealed to investors. Morocco has
strengthened its education system and invested in
roads, ports and electric power. She says
investments like these not only put people to work.
They also create the basis for future economic and
political development. For VOA Special English I'm
Alex Villarreal.
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