{ "Introduction": { "Background": { "text": "
The regularity and richness of the annual Nile River flood, coupled with semi-isolation provided by deserts to the east and west, allowed for the development of one of the world's great civilizations. A unified kingdom arose circa 3200 B.C., and a series of dynasties ruled in Egypt for the next three millennia. The last native dynasty fell to the Persians in 341 B.C., who in turn were replaced by the Greeks, Romans, and Byzantines. Arab conquerors introduced Islam and the Arabic language in the 7th century and ruled for the next six centuries. A local military caste, the Mamluks took control about 1250 and continued to govern after the conquest of Egypt by the Ottoman Turks in 1517. Completion of the Suez Canal in 1869 elevated Egypt as an important world transportation hub. Ostensibly to protect its investments, Britain seized control of Egypt's government in 1882, but nominal allegiance to the Ottoman Empire continued until 1914. Egypt gained partial independence from the UK in 1922 and acquired full sovereignty from Britain in 1952. British forces evacuated the Suez Canal Zone in 1956. The completion of the Aswan High Dam in 1971 and the resultant Lake Nasser have reaffirmed the time-honored place of the Nile River in the agriculture and ecology of Egypt. A rapidly growing population (the largest in the Arab world), limited arable land, and dependence on the Nile all continue to overtax resources and stress society. The government has struggled to meet the demands of Egypt's fast-growing population as it implements large-scale infrastructure projects, energy cooperation, and foreign direct investment appeals.
Inspired by the 2010 Tunisian revolution, Egyptian opposition groups led demonstrations and labor strikes countrywide, culminating in President Hosni MUBARAK's ouster in 2011. Egypt's military assumed national leadership until a new legislature was in place in early 2012; later that same year, Muslim Brotherhood candidate Muhammad MURSI won the presidential election. Following protests throughout the spring of 2013 against MURSI's government and the Muslim Brotherhood, the Egyptian Armed Forces intervened and removed MURSI from power in July 2013 and replaced him with interim president Adly MANSOUR. Simultaneously, the government began enacting laws to limit freedoms of assembly and expression. In January 2014, voters approved a new constitution by referendum and in May 2014 elected former defense minister Abdelfattah ELSISI president. Egypt elected a new legislature in December 2015, its first House of Representatives since 2012. ELSISI was reelected to a second four-year term in March 2018. In April 2019, Egypt approved via national referendum a set of constitutional amendments extending ELSISI’s term in office through 2024 and possibly through 2030 if reelected for a third term. The amendments would also allow future presidents up to two consecutive six-year terms in office, reestablish an upper legislative house, allow for one or more vice presidents, establish a 25% quota for female legislators, reaffirm the military’s role as guardian of Egypt, and expand presidential authority to appoint the heads of judicial councils. Successful legislative elections were held in October-November 2020, having been delayed for six months.
" } }, "Geography": { "Location": { "text": "Northern Africa, bordering the Mediterranean Sea, between Libya and the Gaza Strip, and the Red Sea north of Sudan, and includes the Asian Sinai Peninsula" }, "Geographic coordinates": { "text": "27 00 N, 30 00 E" }, "Map references": { "text": "Africa" }, "Area": { "total": { "text": "1,001,450 sq km" }, "land": { "text": "995,450 sq km" }, "water": { "text": "6,000 sq km" } }, "Area - comparative": { "text": "more than eight times the size of Ohio; slightly more than three times the size of New Mexico" }, "Land boundaries": { "total": { "text": "2,612 km" }, "border countries": { "text": "Gaza Strip 13 km; Israel 208 km; Libya 1,115 km; Sudan 1,276 km" } }, "Coastline": { "text": "2,450 km" }, "Maritime claims": { "territorial sea": { "text": "12 nm" }, "contiguous zone": { "text": "24 nm" }, "exclusive economic zone": { "text": "200 nm or the equidistant median line with Cyprus" }, "continental shelf": { "text": "200 nm" } }, "Climate": { "text": "desert; hot, dry summers with moderate winters" }, "Terrain": { "text": "vast desert plateau interrupted by Nile valley and delta" }, "Elevation": { "highest point": { "text": "Mount Catherine 2,629 m" }, "lowest point": { "text": "Qattara Depression -133 m" }, "mean elevation": { "text": "321 m" } }, "Natural resources": { "text": "petroleum, natural gas, iron ore, phosphates, manganese, limestone, gypsum, talc, asbestos, lead, rare earth elements, zinc" }, "Land use": { "agricultural land": { "text": "3.6% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: arable land": { "text": "arable land: 2.8% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent crops": { "text": "permanent crops: 0.8% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent pasture": { "text": "permanent pasture: 0% (2018 est.)" }, "forest": { "text": "0.1% (2018 est.)" }, "other": { "text": "96.3% (2018 est.)" } }, "Irrigated land": { "text": "36,500 sq km (2012)" }, "Major lakes (area sq km)": { "salt water lake(s)": { "text": "Lake Manzala - 1,360 sq km
Egypt is the most populous country in the Arab world and the third-most-populous country in Africa, behind Nigeria and Ethiopia. Most of the country is desert, so about 95% of the population is concentrated in a narrow strip of fertile land along the Nile River, which represents only about 5% of Egypt’s land area. Egypt’s rapid population growth – 46% between 1994 and 2014 – stresses limited natural resources, jobs, housing, sanitation, education, and health care.
Although the country’s total fertility rate (TFR) fell from roughly 5.5 children per woman in 1980 to just over 3 in the late 1990s, largely as a result of state-sponsored family planning programs, the population growth rate dropped more modestly because of decreased mortality rates and longer life expectancies. During the last decade, Egypt’s TFR decline stalled for several years and then reversed, reaching 3.6 in 2011, and is under 3 as of 2022. Contraceptive use has held steady at about 60%, while preferences for larger families and early marriage may have strengthened in the wake of the recent 2011 revolution. The large cohort of women of or nearing childbearing age will sustain high population growth for the foreseeable future (an effect called population momentum).
Nevertheless, post-MUBARAK governments have not made curbing population growth a priority. To increase contraceptive use and to prevent further overpopulation will require greater government commitment and substantial social change, including encouraging smaller families and better educating and empowering women. Currently, literacy, educational attainment, and labor force participation rates are much lower for women than men. In addition, the prevalence of violence against women, the lack of female political representation, and the perpetuation of the nearly universal practice of female genital cutting continue to keep women from playing a more significant role in Egypt’s public sphere.
Population pressure, poverty, high unemployment, and the fragmentation of inherited land holdings have historically motivated Egyptians, primarily young men, to migrate internally from rural and smaller urban areas in the Nile Delta region and the poorer rural south to Cairo, Alexandria, and other urban centers in the north, while a much smaller number migrated to the Red Sea and Sinai areas. Waves of forced internal migration also resulted from the 1967 Arab-Israeli War and the floods caused by the completion of the Aswan High Dam in 1970. Limited numbers of students and professionals emigrated temporarily prior to the early 1970s, when economic problems and high unemployment pushed the Egyptian Government to lift restrictions on labor migration. At the same time, high oil revenues enabled Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and other Gulf states, as well as Libya and Jordan, to fund development projects, creating a demand for unskilled labor (mainly in construction), which attracted tens of thousands of young Egyptian men.
Between 1970 and 1974 alone, Egyptian migrants in the Gulf countries increased from approximately 70,000 to 370,000. Egyptian officials encouraged legal labor migration both to alleviate unemployment and to generate remittance income (remittances continue to be one of Egypt’s largest sources of foreign currency and GDP). During the mid-1980s, however, depressed oil prices resulting from the Iran-Iraq War, decreased demand for low-skilled labor, competition from less costly South Asian workers, and efforts to replace foreign workers with locals significantly reduced Egyptian migration to the Gulf States. The number of Egyptian migrants dropped from a peak of almost 3.3 million in 1983 to about 2.2 million at the start of the 1990s, but numbers gradually recovered.
In the 2000s, Egypt began facilitating more labor migration through bilateral agreements, notably with Arab countries and Italy, but illegal migration to Europe through overstayed visas or maritime human smuggling via Libya also rose. The Egyptian Government estimated there were 6.5 million Egyptian migrants in 2009, with roughly 75% being temporary migrants in other Arab countries (Libya, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates) and 25% being predominantly permanent migrants in the West (US, UK, Italy, France, and Canada).
During the 2000s, Egypt became an increasingly important transit and destination country for economic migrants and asylum seekers, including Palestinians, East Africans, and South Asians and, more recently, Iraqis and Syrians. Egypt draws many refugees because of its resettlement programs with the West; Cairo has one of the largest urban refugee populations in the world. Many East African migrants are interned or live in temporary encampments along the Egypt-Israel border, and some have been shot and killed by Egyptian border guards.
" }, "Age structure": { "0-14 years": { "text": "34.37% (male 19,381,371/female 18,271,080)" }, "15-64 years": { "text": "60.27% (male 33,921,778/female 32,102,087)" }, "65 years and over": { "text": "5.36% (2023 est.) (male 2,976,765/female 2,893,639)" } }, "Dependency ratios": { "total dependency ratio": { "text": "60.8" }, "youth dependency ratio": { "text": "53.2" }, "elderly dependency ratio": { "text": "7.7" }, "potential support ratio": { "text": "13 (2021 est.)" } }, "Median age": { "total": { "text": "24.1 years" }, "male": { "text": "23.8 years" }, "female": { "text": "24.5 years (2020 est.)" } }, "Population growth rate": { "text": "1.59% (2023 est.)" }, "Birth rate": { "text": "20.48 births/1,000 population (2023 est.)" }, "Death rate": { "text": "4.32 deaths/1,000 population (2023 est.)" }, "Net migration rate": { "text": "-0.29 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2023 est.)" }, "Population distribution": { "text": "approximately 95% of the population lives within 20 km of the Nile River and its delta; vast areas of the country remain sparsely populated or uninhabited as shown in this population distribution map" }, "Urbanization": { "urban population": { "text": "43.1% of total population (2023)" }, "rate of urbanization": { "text": "1.9% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)" } }, "Major urban areas - population": { "text": "22.183 million CAIRO (capital), 5.588 million Alexandria, 778,000 Bur Sa'id (2023)" }, "Sex ratio": { "at birth": { "text": "1.06 male(s)/female" }, "0-14 years": { "text": "1.06 male(s)/female" }, "15-64 years": { "text": "1.06 male(s)/female" }, "65 years and over": { "text": "1.03 male(s)/female" }, "total population": { "text": "1.06 male(s)/female (2023 est.)" } }, "Mother's mean age at first birth": { "text": "22.6 years (2014 est.)", "note": "note: data represents median age at first birth among women 25-49" }, "Maternal mortality ratio": { "text": "17 deaths/100,000 live births (2020 est.)" }, "Infant mortality rate": { "total": { "text": "17.27 deaths/1,000 live births" }, "male": { "text": "18.22 deaths/1,000 live births" }, "female": { "text": "16.25 deaths/1,000 live births (2023 est.)" } }, "Life expectancy at birth": { "total population": { "text": "74.72 years" }, "male": { "text": "73.53 years" }, "female": { "text": "75.98 years (2023 est.)" } }, "Total fertility rate": { "text": "2.76 children born/woman (2023 est.)" }, "Gross reproduction rate": { "text": "1.34 (2023 est.)" }, "Contraceptive prevalence rate": { "text": "58.5% (2014)" }, "Drinking water source": { "improved: urban": { "text": "urban: 99.7% of population" }, "improved: rural": { "text": "rural: 99.7% of population" }, "improved: total": { "text": "total: 99.7% of population" }, "unimproved: urban": { "text": "urban: 0.3% of population" }, "unimproved: rural": { "text": "rural: 0.3% of population" }, "unimproved: total": { "text": "total: 0.3% of population (2020 est.)" } }, "Current health expenditure": { "text": "4.4% of GDP (2020)" }, "Physicians density": { "text": "0.75 physicians/1,000 population (2019)" }, "Hospital bed density": { "text": "1.4 beds/1,000 population (2017)" }, "Sanitation facility access": { "improved: urban": { "text": "urban: 99.9% of population" }, "improved: rural": { "text": "rural: 98.2% of population" }, "improved: total": { "text": "total: 98.9% of population" }, "unimproved: urban": { "text": "urban: 0.1% of population" }, "unimproved: rural": { "text": "rural: 1.8% of population" }, "unimproved: total": { "text": "total: 1.1% of population (2020 est.)" } }, "Major infectious diseases": { "degree of risk": { "text": "intermediate (2023)" }, "food or waterborne diseases": { "text": "bacterial diarrhea, hepatitis A, and typhoid fever" } }, "Obesity - adult prevalence rate": { "text": "32% (2016)" }, "Alcohol consumption per capita": { "total": { "text": "0.14 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "beer": { "text": "0.09 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "wine": { "text": "0.01 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "spirits": { "text": "0.04 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" }, "other alcohols": { "text": "0 liters of pure alcohol (2019 est.)" } }, "Tobacco use": { "total": { "text": "24.3% (2020 est.)" }, "male": { "text": "48.1% (2020 est.)" }, "female": { "text": "0.4% (2020 est.)" } }, "Children under the age of 5 years underweight": { "text": "7% (2014)" }, "Currently married women (ages 15-49)": { "text": "71.1% (2023 est.)" }, "Education expenditures": { "text": "2.5% of GDP (2020 est.)" }, "Literacy": { "definition": { "text": "age 15 and over can read and write" }, "total population": { "text": "73.1%" }, "male": { "text": "78.8%" }, "female": { "text": "67.4% (2021)" } }, "School life expectancy (primary to tertiary education)": { "total": { "text": "14 years" }, "male": { "text": "14 years" }, "female": { "text": "14 years (2018)" } }, "Youth unemployment rate (ages 15-24)": { "total": { "text": "24.3%" }, "male": { "text": "15.6%" }, "female": { "text": "59.5% (2021 est.)" } } }, "Environment": { "Environment - current issues": { "text": "agricultural land being lost to urbanization and windblown sands; increasing soil salination below Aswan High Dam; desertification; oil pollution threatening coral reefs, beaches, and marine habitats; other water pollution from agricultural pesticides, raw sewage, and industrial effluents; limited natural freshwater resources away from the Nile, which is the only perennial water source; rapid growth in population overstraining the Nile and natural resources" }, "Environment - international agreements": { "party to": { "text": "Biodiversity, Climate Change, Climate Change-Kyoto Protocol, Climate Change-Paris Agreement, Desertification, Endangered Species, Environmental Modification, Hazardous Wastes, Law of the Sea, Marine Dumping-London Convention, Marine Dumping-London Protocol, Nuclear Test Ban, Ozone Layer Protection, Ship Pollution, Wetlands" }, "signed, but not ratified": { "text": "Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban" } }, "Climate": { "text": "desert; hot, dry summers with moderate winters" }, "Land use": { "agricultural land": { "text": "3.6% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: arable land": { "text": "arable land: 2.8% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent crops": { "text": "permanent crops: 0.8% (2018 est.)" }, "agricultural land: permanent pasture": { "text": "permanent pasture: 0% (2018 est.)" }, "forest": { "text": "0.1% (2018 est.)" }, "other": { "text": "96.3% (2018 est.)" } }, "Urbanization": { "urban population": { "text": "43.1% of total population (2023)" }, "rate of urbanization": { "text": "1.9% annual rate of change (2020-25 est.)" } }, "Revenue from forest resources": { "text": "0.15% of GDP (2018 est.)" }, "Air pollutants": { "particulate matter emissions": { "text": "79.28 micrograms per cubic meter (2016 est.)" }, "carbon dioxide emissions": { "text": "238.56 megatons (2016 est.)" }, "methane emissions": { "text": "59.68 megatons (2020 est.)" } }, "Waste and recycling": { "municipal solid waste generated annually": { "text": "21 million tons (2012 est.)" }, "municipal solid waste recycled annually": { "text": "2.625 million tons (2013 est.)" }, "percent of municipal solid waste recycled": { "text": "12.5% (2013 est.)" } }, "Major lakes (area sq km)": { "salt water lake(s)": { "text": "Lake Manzala - 1,360 sq kmSudan claims but Egypt de facto administers security and economic development of Halaib region north of the 22nd parallel boundary; Egypt no longer shows its administration of the Bir Tawil trapezoid in Sudan on its maps; Gazan breaches in the security wall with Egypt in January 2008 highlight difficulties in monitoring the Sinai border
" }, "Refugees and internally displaced persons": { "refugees (country of origin)": { "text": "70,021 (West Bank and Gaza Strip) (mid-year 2022); 52,446 (Sudan) (refugees and asylum seekers), 20,970 (South Sudan) (refugees and asylum seekers), 21,105 (Eritrea) (refugees and asylum seekers), 15,585 (Ethiopia) (refugees and asylum seekers), 10,025 (Yemen) (refugees and asylum seekers), 6,815 (Iraq) (refugees and asylum seekers), 6,802 (Somalia) (refugees and asylum seekers) (2022); 250,000 (Sudan) (refugees since 15 April 2023), 147,999 (Syria) (2023)" }, "stateless persons": { "text": "10 (2022)" } }, "Illicit drugs": { "text": "major source of precursor chemicals used in the production of illicit narcotics
" } } }