Egypt’s economic engine kicked into a higher gear in the opening stretch of the 2025/26 fiscal year, clocking a 5.3% jump in GDP—an upswing from the more modest 3.5% pace seen a year earlier. The planning ministry credits the rebound to a sweeping wave of structural upgrades and policy resets that have begun to show their muscle.
The country’s economic stewards now have their eyes on a full-year growth target of around 5%, nudging their aim higher from earlier forecasts. It’s an ambitious stride for a nation still navigating the ripple effects of a bruising currency slide, relentless inflation pressures and regional turbulence stirred by the conflict in Gaza.
After growth cooled to 2.4% in 2023/24, Cairo shifted into reform overdrive under an $8 billion partnership with the International Monetary Fund. That push was buoyed further by a heavyweight $24 billion investment package from the UAE’s sovereign wealth fund, anchored by a landmark Mediterranean-coast land deal—fresh capital that’s helping steady the country’s economic path and revive momentum across key sectors.


