Events

Praetorian Spearhead: The Role of the Military in the Evolution of Egypt's State Capitalism 3.0

Hosted by the Middle East Centre

Zoom (Online)

Speaker

Yezid Sayigh

Yezid Sayigh

Carnegie Middle East Centre

Chair

Harry Pettit

Harry Pettit

LSE Middle East Centre

 YezidSayighPraetorianSpearhead-800-600

This webinar will be the launch of Yezid Sayigh's latest report 'Praetorian Spearhead: The Role of the Military in the Evolution of Egypt’s State Capitalism 3.0' published under the LSE Middle East Centre Paper Series.

In this report, Sayigh explores how military involvement in the Egyptian economy is giving rise to a new version of state capitalism. Driven by Arab socialism in the 1960s and reshaped by privatisation in the 1990s, under President Abdel-Fattah el-Sisi the state has sought to bend the private sector to its capital investment strategy while continuing to profess commitment to free market economics. His administration seeks private sector investment, but exclusively on its own terms. This is demonstrated through the expansion and diversion of military economic activity in five sectors: real estate development, creation of industrial and transport hubs, rentier or extractive activities related to natural resources, relations with the private sector, and the effort to increase the state’s financial efficiency while seeking private investment to help capitalise the public sector. This approach may generate macro-level economic growth and improve the efficiency of public finances, but it also reinforces the grip of the state rather than consolidating free markets. Reflecting this, private sector investment in the economy is lower today than it was in the socialist phase of the 1960s.

Yezid Sayigh is Senior Fellow at the Malcolm H. Kerr Carnegie Middle East Center in Beirut, where he leads the programme on Civil-Military Relations in Arab States (CMRAS). His work focuses on the comparative political and economic roles of Arab armed forces and non-state actors, the impact of war on states and societies, the politics of post-conflict reconstruction and security sector transformation in Arab transitions, as well as authoritarian resurgence. He is the author most recently of ‘Owners of the Republic: An Anatomy of Egypt’s Military Economy’ (2019).

Harry Pettit is a Visiting Fellow at the LSE Middle East Centre and Research Fellow in Urban Geography at the University of Reading. Harry's research focuses on the emotional politics of emerging forms of precarious work in Cairo, Egypt. His PhD work, currently being written up as a book, argues that the practices of hope-making among educated underemployed young men in Cairo constitute a form of emotional labour which enables their continued exploitation and legitimises urban inequalities in Cairo. He is now working on a follow-up project on the emotional politics of emerging gig economy work in Cairo.

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