Egypt is a decentralized, market-oriented economy that depends mainly on petroleum exports, agriculture, tourism, and media. The foreign exchange is earned by the production of petroleum and natural gas. The Foreign Direct Investment as well as FII are encouraged in the country by reducing energy subsidies, privatizing several enterprises, and tax reforms. A large number of Egypt tenders and RFP's floats from Construction sector. El Salvador's economy has traditionally been agricultural, but services and industry now employ a greater percentage of the workforce and account for a much higher percentage of the gross domestic product. Corn is the chief subsistence crop and rice, beans, oilseeds, and sorghum are also grown, coffee and sugar are the major cash crops. Food and beverage processing is important and petroleum, chemicals, fertilizer, textiles, furniture and light metals are among El Salvador's leading manufactures. Offshore assembly products, coffee, sugar, shrimp, textiles and chemicals are El Salvador's main exports. The leading imports are raw materials, consumer and capital goods, fuel, food, petroleum, and electricity. The United States is by far the largest trading partner. A large number of Egypt tenders and RFP's floats from Construction sector.