Rising visitor numbers are driving a hospitality hiring frenzy that's pulling skilled workers away from traditional sectors and forcing employers across the city to rethink compensation and working conditions.
As foreign capital returns to Egyptian markets, understanding the interplay between investment inflows and cost-of-living pressures has never been more crucial for the capital's residents and businesses.
Rising energy costs, currency pressures, and shifting consumer behaviour are testing the resilience of entrepreneurs across the city's bustling commercial hubs.
As informal sector startups proliferate across Downtown and Zamalek, traditional employment models are being challenged by a new generation of hustlers rewriting the talent market.
As corporations follow government incentives eastward, the city's traditional business districts face a talent drain that's forcing a reckoning with Egypt's commercial real estate future.
Egypt's 28% inflation crisis sparked a developer rush for affordable Cairo housing. Tatweer Misr and SODIC pivot to smaller units as middle-class families struggle with rent consuming 40-50% of income.
Geopolitical tensions reshape Cairo's office market as multinationals delay lease commitments. Smart Village and New Cairo face subdued demand for premium Grade A space.
As inflation pressures ease and foreign investment returns, Cairo's employers face a tightening talent pool and rising wage expectations across tech, hospitality and financial sectors.
As multinational companies reroute shipments away from unstable regions, Egyptian freight forwarders and port operators are positioning themselves to capture billions in new trade flows.
As visitor arrivals climb and hotel occupancy recovers, what do the latest investment flows tell us about Egypt's tourism recovery and what comes next?
As digital-first entrepreneurs flood neighbourhoods from Zamalek to New Cairo, employers face an unprecedented talent drain—and a reckoning over how they compete for Gen Z workers.
Rising tensions in the Middle East and currency volatility are forcing Cairo's restaurant and hotel owners to rethink pricing, sourcing, and survival strategies.
As multinational firms abandon downtown towers for distributed teams, a new class of boutique workspace operators is reshaping the commercial property landscape across New Cairo and Garden City.
Supply chain pressures and changing consumer habits are reshaping the food and hospitality landscape across the capital—here's what's really happening at street level.
Entrepreneurs across the capital's bustling commercial districts are grappling with currency pressures, energy expenses, and changing consumer habits that threaten their viability.