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Egypt's fiscal deficit is roughly 8 percent of GDP, compared with a median 4 percent for other Ba rating category, according to Moody's. Its public debt also was significantly higher than other countries in the same category. Part of the problem stemmed from sizable subsidy costs. The government spends roughly 100 billion Egyptian pounds per year on subsidizing key commodities such as fuel and foodstuff, with roughly 63 million of its 80 million people receiving such help. Efforts to cut the subsidies
-- a key step to boosting spending in other sectors -- were delayed by the world's recession two years earlier. Under the best of circumstances, it would have been an unpopular move in a country where about 40 percent of the population lives on or below the World Bank-set poverty line of $2 per day. "There is a strong possibility that fiscal policy will be loosened as part of the government's efforts to contain discontent," Moody's said.
[Associated
Press;
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