Cairo airport officials said the IMF mission chief for Egypt, Christopher Jarvis, led the team that would meet officials later in the day from the Finance Ministry and the Central Bank. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not allowed to brief reporters.
The IMF has not given any details about the request or possible funding amounts, although Egypt has said it was seeking a loan of USD 12 billion from the IMF over three years, as well as USD 7 billion from other sources.
Reserves fell 18.1 per cent from June to December, shrinking to USD 16.5 billion, before edging up to USD 17.546 at the end of June, according to central bank data. Egypt had USD 36 billion in reserves before the 2011 uprising.
The local currency, the pound, has been falling to new lows. The official central bank rate is 8.78 Egyptian pounds to the dollar, but the true price on Egypt's robust black market, according to media reports, is around 12 and has even reached 13 to the dollar at times.
Basic commodities such as bread are heavily subsidized in Egypt, and the reforms needed to meet IMF loan criteria require broad cuts to such aid.
The risk of a backlash on the street has prevented successive leaders in Egypt from making such cuts, or enacting other revenue-generating policies such as levying further sales tax.
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