Features/Interviews

Coronavirus crisis spells trouble for many Egyptian breadwinners

CAIRO (Reuters) – Squatting with other day laborers under a bridge in Cairo, 48-year-old Yasser Nagy says he has waited in vain for two weeks for work on a construction site so he can feed his family.

Egypt, like other countries, has been hit hard by the spread of the coronavirus, which has wiped out its vital tourism industry and prompted authorities to close airports, restaurants, firms and shops and to impose a night curfew.

President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi has approved a LE100 billion pound (six billion US dollars) plan to stem the economic fallout. Measures include the payment of salaries for staff sent home by their employers as well as a payment of 500 pounds a month for three months for workers in the informal sector who are not registered on social insurance rolls.

Nearly two out of three jobs in Egypt are in the informal sector, according to a study published in 2018 by the International Labor Organization (ILO), and trying to deploy emergency cash to people who are not on the system is a big challenge, according to analysts.

More than a dozen workers interviewed said 500 pounds a month would not cover their bills. A typical unskilled factory worker earns 2,000 pounds a month, businessmen say.

“I have five children in school. I haven’t worked in 16 days,” Nagy said, sitting next to his tools in the Sayeda Aisha district. He said he had applied for the aid but has not yet received any money.

Before the crisis, he could earn up to 150 pounds a day, but now he says he has to borrow to feed himself.

“The state is trying as much as possible to pass this stage,” Mohamed Saafan, the Minister for Manpower, told a local television channel. “We will not leave anybody, either business owners or laborers, behind.”

To help irregular workers, the government has launched an online system for them to apply for the monthly payment. Construction and port workers as well as sailors, miners and other workers are eligible

Saafan said 1.5 million workers had registered so far. The World Bank has estimated Egypt’s workforce numbers around 30 million.

Several workers told Reuters they had not yet figured out how to apply or were still awaiting approvals.

“I applied … and they told me to come pick it up in two days. I came after two days, and they told me to come in a week,” said Khaled Ibrahim, 58, who works in a cafe that closed.

“I need to pay my rent [but] I can’t,” he said, waiting with 15 others at a post office.

A spokesman for the manpower ministry said after workers registered online their application would be assessed by a committee headed by the prime minister to see if they qualified.

While the government is finalizing its own procedures, non-governmental organizations have been screening applications and several thousands have already been approved, he said. He could not be reached for comment on Ibrahim’s case.

More Hardship

The impact of the pandemic is already making itself felt. Egypt’s tourism sector typically accounts for an estimated 15 percent of GDP, but hotels and all tourist sites are shut, including, for the first time in recent history, the Pyramids of Giza.

More hardship could loom as some Gulf countries, where millions of Egyptians work, implement their own lockdowns, which could sharply reduce remittances, analysts say.

Annual total remittances from Egyptians overseas are $25 billion, estimated to be mostly from those in the Gulf.

“Egypt faces an enormous challenge in trying to keep the population home,” said Timothy Kaldas, non-resident fellow at the Tahrir Institute for Middle East Policy. “Many jobs cannot be performed remotely and a third of the population lives below the poverty line earning less than two dollars a day.”

The curfew has reduced the working hours of those who still have jobs and civil servants cannot top up their salaries by working as taxi drivers at night, as some normally do.

Tourism Minister Khaled al-Anani said that hotels and operators were receiving support and March salaries would be paid. He warned that laying workers off would be illegal.

Such a ban might be hard to enforce, as some tour guides or souvenir peddlers have no work contracts, analysts say.

Emergency payments for regular workers sent home by their employers should benefit 900,000 workers in the tourism sector alone, Saafan said.

Souvenir shop owners in Cairo’s historic Khan al-Khalili market said business had never been as bad, even in the turmoil following the ousting of late president Hosni Mubarak in 2011.

“I have four children and I earn about 150 pounds per day. If I stay a day or two or three at home… where am I going to get the money?,” said Amr Adel, who sells trinkets, scarves and belly dancing suits in a one-room shop.

He said he had not applied for aid because he didn’t know how to.

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Reporting by Amina Ismail, Mahmoud Mourad, Ulf Laessing, Patrick Werr, Nadia El-Gowely, Seham Eloraby, Nadeen Ebrahim, Olivia Kumwenda, Mfuneko Toyana and Alexis Akwagyiram.; Writing by Ulf Laessing; Editing by Dominic Evans, William Maclean and Carmel Crimmins

Image: A shopkeeper waits for customers at a souvenir shop at a popular tourist area named “Khan el-Khalili” in the al-Hussein and Al-Azhar districts in Cairo as Egypt ramps up efforts to slow the spread of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Cairo, Egypt, April 6, 2020. (REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany)

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