Book

Investors and workers in the western desert of Egypt: an exploratory survey

American University in Cairo Press15 • Published In 1992 • Pages: viii, 88

By: Sherbiny, Naiem A., Cole, Donald P., Girgis, Nadia Makary.

Abstract
This is a report on economic development in Egypt's Western Desert based on a survey of 125 entrepreneurs and 182 workers in both urban and rural areas, including Marsa Matrouh, Wadi el Natroun, Sadat City, and South Tahrir. Entrepreneurs and workers are both Egyptians from the Nile valley and delta region and local Bedouins. Unfortunately, in most of the report the sample is not broken down by ethnic group, although most of the Bedouin investment (but not necessarily employment) is in the traditional sectors of agriculture and livestock. The other economic sectors examined are industry, trade, services, contracting, mining, and tourism. The researchers asked information regarding individual and family profiles, migration profiles, community services, socio-economic change, conflict, education, capital investment, costs of living, water needs, government regulations, production costs, and marketing. The researchers end their report with a list of recommendations.
Subjects
Economic planning and development
Production and supply
Occupational specialization
Labor supply and employment
Individual enterprise
culture
Libyan Bedouin
HRAF PubDate
1999
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Northern Africa
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Economist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 1998
Field Date
1990
Coverage Date
1990
Coverage Place
Western Desert, Egypt
Notes
Naiem A. Sherbiny, Donald P. Cole, Nadia Makary Girgis
Includes bibliographical references (p. 85-87)
LCSH
Bedouins