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The objective of this thesis is to highlight the Egyptian experiment concerning its economic
reform programme, and to determine whether this programme has affected Egypt's stock
market performance. Using 18 years of data, which covered the period 1980/8 1 to 1997/98 and
incorporates time periods prior to and after adopting the economic reform programme, the
thesis empirically investigates three main issues. Firstly, there is an examination of whether
the Egyptian government succeeded in implementing its economic reform programme by
looking to the main economic indicators: nominal interest rates, real interest rates, the inflation
rate, exchange rate stability, the real GDP growth rate, per capita income and the budget deficit
in Egypt after 1991, and comparing them with the same indicators prior to this period.
Secondly, the thesis considers the changes in Egypt's stock market after the introduction of the
economic reform programme by measuring the changes in four main dimensions: market
activity, market size, market liquidity and market concentration. Thirdly, and this is the main
part of the thesis, the research concentrates on examining the impact of Egypt's economic
reform programme on its stock market performance.
For the first two issues, several logistic regressions are performed to determine whether the
data prior to 1991 can be separated from the data relating to the period after 1991. The results
from this analysis indicate clearly that both type of data series witnessed dramatic changes
after 1991.
As to the third issue, cointegration analysis is used to model the relationship between
economic reform programme variables and the stock market performance variables within an
error correction model form. Generally speaking, the results from this analysis demonstrate
that economic variables have an impact upon various features of market activity, market size,
market liquidity and market concentration. An important observation in this thesis is that
Egypt still needs to accelerate its rate of growth, as it was the only independent variable, which
did not show any significant change or significant impact upon the stock market performance
variables. |
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