The value of the Middle East and North Africa consumer packaged goods market is projected to expand by nearly a third by 2030, anchored by sustained spending in Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE, according to a new report.

Consumer activity in the region is expected to result in a market size of about $633 billion in 2030, an almost a 30 per cent annual jump from an estimated $488 billion in 2025, Bain & Company said in its first Middle East Consumer Products Report.

Mena, along with China and India, have posted the highest sales growth globally, driven by volume, as disposable incomes have increased underpinned by government initiatives to encourage spending, the US-headquartered consultancy said.

Egypt, the most populous nation in the Arab world, will continue to lead the way with a market size of $106 billion by 2030 βˆ’ up more than 47 per cent last year, Bain said.

The consumer products market in Saudi Arabia, the Arab world's largest economy, is expected to grow by 22 per cent to $82 billion, according to the report. In the UAE βˆ’ the second largest βˆ’ it is predicted by Bain to expand by 28 per cent to $32 billion.

Through that period, the Mena region is projected to recording a compound annual growth rate of 5 per cent, with Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE posting CAGRs of 8 per cent, 4 per cent and 5 per cent, respectively, which are all well above 1.7 per cent global average in the 2023-2024 period, the study showed.

Egypt offers β€œsignificant long-term potential”, owing to its population, the rise of modern trade channels and a growing segment of younger urban households driving demand for packaged goods and modern retail formats, analysts at Bain wrote in the report. A sizeable middle class is also emerging in the country.

β€œThis polarisation – between a price-sensitive mass market and a smaller but aspirational middle class – mirrors Egypt’s consumption outloo

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