In one word, the answer should be: NO.
Here is the answer - if you want OUR money (whoever the OUR may be) YOU MUST accept the conditions. You don't get to go to the bank and dictate TERMS to them (however much we wish we could).
Protect visitors, encourage tourism, stop with religious attacks on the paganism of the pyramids, ensure visitors are not slaughtered on the steps of Hatshepsuts tomb. If you do this, people will want to visit. Otherwise, enjoy your sandbox, because that is all you have.
egypt
Here is the answer - if you want OUR money (whoever the OUR may be) YOU MUST accept the conditions. You don't get to go to the bank and dictate TERMS to them (however much we wish we could).
Protect visitors, encourage tourism, stop with religious attacks on the paganism of the pyramids, ensure visitors are not slaughtered on the steps of Hatshepsuts tomb. If you do this, people will want to visit. Otherwise, enjoy your sandbox, because that is all you have.
August 22, 2012
By KAREEM FAHIM
CAIRO — The Egyptian government on Wednesday
requested a $4.8 billion loan from the International Monetary Fund, in the
country’s latest attempt to secure financing for an economy badly damaged by
political upheaval since the fall of President Hosni Mubarak.
Egypt’s
prime minister, Hesham Qandil, said that he hoped to reach an agreement with
the International Monetary Fund by December.
This year, Egypt requested a smaller loan but
said at the time that the amount could increase because of the country’s
falling revenues from tourism and increasingly scarce foreign investment.
Speaking at a news conference with the monetary
fund’s managing director, Christine Lagarde, Mr. Qandil said that Ms. Lagarde’s
visit sent a message to the world that Egypt was “stabilizing.”
The loan has been a contentious issue in Egypt,
where there is much popular resentment against conditions required by Western
lenders.
Members of the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt’s most
powerful political party, had previously voiced reservations about accepting
the I.M.F. loan.
But the country’s new president, Mohamed Morsi,
a former Brotherhood leader, has seemingly put aside those reservations as he
grapples with Egypt’s deepening financial crisis.
While the terms of a possible agreement are
still being discussed, Mr. Qandil said that the interest rate on the loan, to
be disbursed in several parts, would be 1.1 percent.
In recent months, Saudi Arabia and Qatar have
lent the Egyptian government at least $3 billion.
Ms. Lagarde said that I.M.F. officials would
travel to Egypt next month to discuss the loan further.
"Egypt faces considerable challenges, including the need to restart growth, and reduce budget and balance of payments deficits," she said in a statement. egypt