egyptians ditch imports and buy local as pound sinks
Last Updated : GMT 05:17:37
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice
Last Updated : GMT 05:17:37
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice

Egyptians ditch imports and buy local as pound sinks

Emiratesvoice, emirates voice

Emiratesvoice, emirates voice Egyptians ditch imports and buy local as pound sinks

Produce is displayed at a vegetable market in Cairo
Cairo - Arab Today

Egyptian chocolate spread maker Swifax has doubled its sales and is struggling to keep up with demand since the pound currency dived in November, forcing shoppers traditionally “obsessed with everything foreign” to ditch pricy imports and buy local. 
“People started changing their habits,” Mohamed El-Gammal, Swifax’s commercial director told Reuters. “We could sell even more ... but we have a problem with our capacity.”
The pound’s flotation and an ensuing increase in tariffs on more than 300 products shipped from abroad have hit importers hard, but have been a boon for domestic manufacturers such as Swifax.
Once shunned in favor of prestigious foreign brands perceived to offer higher quality, Egyptian-made products are much more affordable for customers who are increasingly price conscious as inflation has shot above 28 percent.
The bonanza began when Egypt abandoned its peg of 8.8 pounds to the dollar on Nov. 3. Since then, the currency has roughly halved in value to around 17.75.
Sitting in his office next to a glass cabinet crammed with varieties of the sandwich-filler popular with sweet-toothed Egyptians, El-Gammal said sales have jumped from 2 million pounds ($112,700) a few months before the flotation to 4 million, as rival imported brands become unaffordable to many.
A 350-gram jar of Swifax’s high-end spread, Moltobella, costs 36 pounds ($2.01) while its budget brand costs around 17 pounds ($0.95). Its main imported competitor sells for about 70 pounds ($3.91) a jar.
Floating the pound helped Egypt to secure a $12 billion IMF loan in return for a reform program that includes tax increases and electricity subsidy cuts, driving up inflation in a country where millions live a paycheck from hunger.
Egypt also raised customs tariffs on many luxury goods to over 50 percent, plugged customs loopholes, and tightened quality controls in an effort to rein in a trade deficit the central bank blames for depressing the currency.
Importers criticized the increases, saying local producers do not have the capacity to fill the gap left by declining sales of foreign goods.
According to Emad Maher, manager of hypermarket chain Samy Salama, switching to local products has increased by 90 percent, mainly because of the price difference.
“In some products, you can compare the local and imported and not find much difference (in quality). But Egyptians are obsessed with everything foreign,” he said.
At Covertina, another chocolate-maker, business is also booming. Chief Executive Mostafa Sayed Salam said production had risen 19 percent in 2016 from the previous year. “After the flotation of the currency, it became hard for importers to sell the chocolate at the old prices,” he said. “My market share has increased from 50 percent to 65-70 percent.”

Narrowing the deficit 
Multinationals are taking notice. Nestle, the packaged food giant, said in January it had signed a deal to acquire Caravan Marketing Company, an Egyptian instant coffee maker that had increased its domestic market share due to competitive pricing.
With Egypt long dependent on imports, the trend suggests the government’s efforts to narrow a big trade deficit and boost domestic industries are starting to work.
Even before the float, imports had been falling due to shortages of foreign currency. Egypt had struggled to attract dollars and revive the economy after the 2011 overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak, with subsequent political turmoil driving away tourists and foreign investors.
Official trade figures for 2016 have yet to be released but a government official told Reuters earlier this month that the deficit had narrowed by 17.4 percent compared with 2015. Imports fell to $62.93 billion from $70.28 billion, said the official, but higher exports also helped to shrink the gap. These rose to $20.26 billion in 2016 from $18.67 billion.
As the unofficial figures suggest, the weaker pound is also helping Egyptian exporters.
Hesham Zahra, chairman of Yasmine cosmetic company, said production had risen 25-35 percent since the flotation boosted sales both at home and abroad. “Today our prices have become competitive in foreign markets, and we can compete with some countries in exports,” he said, adding that Yasmine lotion retails for a quarter of the price of some imported brands.
Trade and Industry Minister Tarek Kabil told Reuters in October that Egypt had produced $4 billion worth of import substitutes since the start of 2016 and aimed to expand domestic industry by 8 percent in three years.
Food industries were leading the way, he said, but local products were also compensating for a retreat in imported building materials, chemicals, leather and furniture.
“This is a golden opportunity for Egyptian producers,” said Abu Bakr Emam, head of research at financial firm Prime Holding. “Local producers used to be unable to compete but now is the right time to go in to compete against imported goods due to the price advantage after the dollar rises.”

Rising prices 
Still, the pound’s dive is a double-edged sword for local manufacturers who largely depend on imported raw materials.
At Swifax, Gammal said the cost of cocoa butter and hazelnut had more than doubled since the flotation. A ton of hazelnut used to cost 90,000 pounds ($5,028) but now it costs 230,000 pounds ($12,851.71).
This forced the company to dip into funds that had been earmarked for expansion. This will now take longer despite the more pressing need to raise capacity. 
“In the end we increased production without the expansion by tripling the shifts at our factories, which adds a lot of strain on the machines,” he said.
With Egypt aiming to raise economic growth under the IMF program to 5.5 percent by the 2018-19 fiscal year from 4.3 percent in 2015-16, the government can ill-afford large numbers of firms to delay investment like Swifax.
But as prices rise, ever more families are looking to save money. “People right now do not care about the quality, it is all about the price,” said once shopper in Cairo who called himself Abu Abdulla. 
“I walk around the supermarket and just look at the prices,” he said as he pushed a trolley piled with seven family-size boxes of Egyptian-made biscuits.
Tapping into the trend, a Facebook group called “Made Proudly in Egypt” lists tried and tested local products, from foods to detergents and even pots and pans.
One of the more than half a million members of the group, writing under the name of Om Khaled, said the bargains sell fast. “I used to get (imported) nappies and baby food for my son and now I get local alternatives but unfortunately the cheap Egyptian products are not always available. I have to look hard for them,” she said.

Source: Arab News

Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

egyptians ditch imports and buy local as pound sinks egyptians ditch imports and buy local as pound sinks

 



Name *

E-mail *

Comment Title*

Comment *

: Characters Left

Mandatory *

Terms of use

Publishing Terms: Not to offend the author, or to persons or sanctities or attacking religions or divine self. And stay away from sectarian and racial incitement and insults.

I agree with the Terms of Use

Security Code*

egyptians ditch imports and buy local as pound sinks egyptians ditch imports and buy local as pound sinks

 



GMT 05:14 2024 Wednesday ,07 February

Sophisticated Classic Dining Room Design Ideas

GMT 17:49 2017 Sunday ,02 July

IFHRA takes big decision on jockeys

GMT 14:40 2017 Sunday ,24 December

Omani Shura Council delegation to visit Bahrain

GMT 12:28 2017 Thursday ,09 November

Commander-in-chief receives FDD delegation

GMT 18:08 2017 Thursday ,09 November

Louvre Abu Dhabi, first of its kind

GMT 14:46 2016 Saturday ,12 November

Bupa Arabia opens over-the-phone medical advice

GMT 12:25 2014 Monday ,11 August

Cake Boss Buddy Valastro wows crowd

GMT 11:03 2014 Thursday ,24 April

Afghan policeman shoots dead 3 US doctors

GMT 11:56 2014 Tuesday ,01 April

6 Afghan Taliban leaders killed in premature blast

GMT 10:45 2014 Tuesday ,02 September

Danes call Israel child-killer regime

GMT 10:38 2017 Wednesday ,29 November

Saudi job-generating commission prepares for1st forum

GMT 03:01 2017 Sunday ,24 September

Crew members of PIA refused hotel rooms in UK

GMT 19:49 2016 Thursday ,10 March

18 dead, 2 injured in car crash in South Sinai

GMT 10:05 2012 Thursday ,11 October

Egyptian scripts await freedom from censorship

GMT 12:32 2016 Friday ,02 September

Fox News Poll: Trump Narrows Clinton's Lead

GMT 22:34 2017 Saturday ,04 March

Syria says agenda agreed for next Geneva round

GMT 00:39 2012 Friday ,21 September

NGO: Egyptian \'tortured to death\' by police

GMT 05:24 2016 Monday ,19 December

Kerry in Saudi Arabia as quartet discuss Yemen

GMT 15:23 2011 Tuesday ,07 June

UN : Sudan\'s Abyei \'tense\' 96,000 displaced

GMT 03:40 2017 Monday ,09 January

Leaked UK Brexit memo: 'Have cake and eat it'

GMT 17:22 2012 Thursday ,07 June

Futurism may make tech clean

GMT 14:32 2012 Sunday ,13 May

A study of poetry by Bliss Perry

GMT 23:16 2017 Monday ,25 September

Federer leads Europe to maiden Laver Cup title

GMT 14:01 2016 Friday ,21 October

Scarlett biz passion pops out in a Paris corn shop
Emiratesvoice, emirates voice
 
 Emirates Voice Facebook,emirates voice facebook  Emirates Voice Twitter,emirates voice twitter Emirates Voice Rss,emirates voice rss  Emirates Voice Youtube,emirates voice youtube  Emirates Voice Youtube,emirates voice youtube

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©

emiratesvoieen emiratesvoiceen emiratesvoiceen emiratesvoiceen
emiratesvoice emiratesvoice emiratesvoice
emiratesvoice
بناية النخيل - رأس النبع _ خلف السفارة الفرنسية _بيروت - لبنان
emiratesvoice, Emiratesvoice, Emiratesvoice