project paper

Tackling Egypt’s rising food insecurity in a time of transition [in Arabic]

by Clemens Breisinger,
Perrihan Al-Riffai,
Olivier Ecker,
Riham Abuismail,
Jane Waite,
Noura Abdelwahab,
Alaa Zohery,
Heba El-Laithy and
Dina Armanious
Open Access

Owing to a succession of crises and worsening poverty, food security in Egypt started to deteriorate as early as 2005. These crises included the avian influenza epidemic in 2006; the food, fuel, and financial crises of 2007-2009; a further rallying of global food prices starting in late 2010; and the challenging macroeconomic context that followed political instability in the wake of the 2011 revolution (see Figure 1). Egypt’s net food-importing status (that includes importing 45-55 percent of its wheat needs) makes it vulnerable to fluctuations in international food prices.