By Dr. Waheed Abdel Meguid
Impenetrable barriers separate the richest Egyptians from the rest of society.
They are real walls of cement and iron, not just symbolic walls describing class structures figuratively.
The wealthiest class is increasingly becoming alienated from the rest of society. They have shut themselves in to enjoy the wealth of a country they know nothing about except what would fill up their coffers.
This minority live in new housing compounds with names like Hyde Park,
It is a phenomenon unknown to
Justifying the coup, the revolution’s leaders said that a small number of citizens, less than half percent of population, monopolized the entire country’s wealth. At the time this percentage was equal to about 20,000 people. The same percentage (half a percent) is now equal to about 80,000 people, given the fact that the population has increased nearly four-fold.
However today’s elite minority, which lives behind within the walls of isolated housing compounds, has not reached that number, although the upper social class in
Reuters recently reported on one of these compounds in Kattamia, Cairo, to demonstrate the contrast between the palaces and Lexus cars and the adjoining small rooms of service workers and gardeners where up to five are crowded in one room.
When I raised the issue at a symposium a few days ago, someone argued that this was a healthy phenomenon indicating that the Egyptian economy is growing. He also demanded not to expect all Egyptians to have access to the fruits of this growth so soon, adding that this phenomenon exists in countries that achieve significant progress rates, such as
He is right.
However, this defense of class separation neglects or ignores two big differences between
Yet this separation is now waning in
The second big difference is that
Improvement in the living standards of a growing number of Indians, as well as Chinese, is one of the factors that increases pressure on global resources, hence one of the reasons for high oil and food prices.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel made a funny comment in this regard, as she said the global food crisis was due to reasons including the fact that the Indians and the Chinese are now eating three meals a day. The tragedy here is that no one recognizes that some Egyptians, who used to eat three meals a day, have almost lost the ability to do so.
Dr Waheed Abdel Meguid is an expert at Al Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies.