The Central Bank of Egypt reported on Wednesday that remittances from Egypt’s foreign workers increased to $7.5 billion in the April-June quarter from $4.6 billion a year earlier, indicating the success of a currency reform in March that was prompted by the IMF.
Over the past two years, remittances—by far Egypt’s largest source of foreign currency inflows—have precipitously decreased as employees have shied away from bank transfers at an artificially high official exchange rate.
Before the government and the IMF signed a deal in March to let the market set the price, the Egyptian pound traded as low as 74 on the black market, with the official rate set at 30.85 to the dollar.
On Wednesday at 2:15 p.m. (1115 GMT), the pound was trading at 49.15 to the dollar.
According to central bank data, remittances fell to $22.08 billion in the fiscal year that ended in June 2023 from $31.92 billion in 2021/22, and then they fell even lower to $9.45 billion in the second half of 2023.
According to the bank, remittances increased to $2.6 billion in June 2023 from $1.5 billion in June 2023.