Egypt’s Inflation Slows to 14.9% in April — But Challenges Remain

Egypt’s annual urban consumer inflation rate slowed unexpectedly to 14.9 percent in April 2026, down from 15.2 percent in March, according to figures released by CAPMAS on May 6. The reading came in below even the most pessimistic analyst forecast — a Reuters poll of 14 economists had predicted a rise to 15.9 percent.

Month-on-month, prices rose by just 1.1 percent. Food and beverage prices fell by 0.7 percent on a monthly basis, though they remained 6.7 percent higher year-on-year.

The figures are a welcome relief for a government waging an uphill battle against price pressures since 2022, when a dollar shortage sent inflation to a record 38 percent in September 2023.

The IMF Programme’s Role

Egypt’s inflation trajectory is tied to its 8-billion-dollar IMF programme, signed in March 2024. Conditions — flexible exchange rate, subsidy reforms, monetary tightening — have produced measurable results.

What Analysts Expected — and Why They Were Wrong

The analyst consensus had forecast inflation rising to 15.9 percent. None produced the expected spike. Food prices declined month-on-month, and energy pass-through was smaller than modelled. This is a case where the models were overly pessimistic about second-round effects, said Dr. Nermin Ismail of the American University in Cairo.

Headwinds That Haven’t Gone Away

Natural gas prices for energy-intensive industries were raised on May 3 — meaning May inflation could show an uptick. External debt servicing remains a significant burden at over 150 billion dollars.

Structural Reform: The Unfinished Agenda

Inflation coming down is necessary for growth, but it is not sufficient, noted Dr. Ismail. You also need productive investment, skills development, and an export strategy.

The 5 percent preliminary GDP growth for Q1 suggests the economy is responding. Whether it can be sustained remains the bigger question.

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