Fifteen years have passed since the Arab Spring first erupted in Egypt, yet a striking question lingers: how many Egyptians today truly remember, or even understand, the rule of Hosni Mubarak and the forces that led to his downfall? With a population that has grown rapidly and remains overwhelmingly young, the events of 2011 are, for millions, not lived experience but inherited memory.
The Arab Spring in Egypt began only 11 days after protesters in Tunisia forced President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali from power. Inspired by that success, Egyptians poured onto the streets demanding dignity, employment, political voice and an end to decades of repression. What followed was an 18-day uprising that reshaped the country’s modern history.
At the time, millions of demonstrators braved violence and uncertainty, occupying streets and public squares in protest against unemployment, poverty and authoritarian rule. Their central demand was clear: the resignation of President Hosni Mubarak, who had ruled Egypt for nearly 30 years.
Yet today’s Egypt is demographically very different from that of 2011. The average age of Egyptians is around 24, making the country one of the youngest in the world. More than 31 per cent of the population—approximately 37 million people—are under the age of 15. For this generation, the Arab Spring is not a personal memory but a story told by parents, teachers and the digital archives of the internet.
Egypt’s Changing Demographic and Economic Picture
| Indicator | 2011 | 2025 (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| Population | 83 million | 120 million |
| Unemployment rate | 12% | 6.4% |
| GDP per capita | USD 2,590 | USD 3,339 |
| Exchange rate (USD) | 1 USD = 5.8 EGP | 1 USD ≈ 47 EGP |
While unemployment has officially fallen, currency devaluation has sharply reduced purchasing power, leaving many families struggling despite higher nominal incomes. According to the Economic Research Forum, Egypt needs to create around 1.5 million jobs each year, yet over the past two decades has generated fewer than 600,000 annually.
Young people remain particularly affected. Although overall unemployment stands at a record low, joblessness among those aged 15–29 remains high at nearly 14.9 per cent. At the same time, more than 3.6 million students are currently enrolled in universities and technical institutes, a figure the government aims to raise to 5.6 million by 2032 to meet the demands of a modern economy.
The 18 Days That Changed Egypt
The Arab Spring unfolded rapidly:
| Date | Key Event |
|---|---|
| 25 January | Nationwide protests begin, calling for Mubarak’s resignation |
| 28 January | Mass marches towards Tahrir Square after Friday prayers |
| 1 February | Rail services halted to prevent protesters reaching Cairo |
| 2 February | Violent clashes as pro-Mubarak groups attack protesters |
| 10 February | Mubarak announces he will remain in office until September |
| 11 February | Mubarak resigns; power handed to the military |
Social media and mobile phones played a decisive role, allowing protesters to broadcast images and videos to the world in real time and mobilise support across cities.
A Regional Youth Phenomenon
Egypt was not alone. Across Tunisia, Libya, Syria and Yemen, youthful populations fuelled uprisings. In Yemen, 41 per cent of citizens are under 15; in Syria, nearly 29 per cent; in Libya, 27 per cent; and in Tunisia, 24 per cent. These demographics underscore why youth-led movements became such a powerful force across the region.
Fifteen years on, the Arab Spring remains a defining chapter in Egypt’s history—but for many of its 30 million young citizens, Hosni Mubarak’s rule is something they know only through stories, statistics and the enduring questions of what that moment promised, and what it ultimately delivered.
