CAIRO — An Egyptian court Sunday postponed hearing a state appeal against a ruling it made this month which scuppered parliamentary elections and deepened political uncertainty during an economic crisis. The Administrative Court said it had adjourned the appeal hearing until March 24 to allow more time to study the legal arguments in a case which has thrown the final stage of Egypt's transition to democracy up in the air. With the country in turmoil since the 2011 overthrow of Hosni Mubarak, Egypt has been without a lower house of parliament since the middle of last year, when a court forced its dissolution by striking down the law used to elect it. Last month President Mohamed Morsi called elections to run from April 22 until late June under a revised electoral law. Most leading opposition parties had announced they would boycott the polls when the Administrative Court cancelled Morsi's decree calling them on technical grounds. Morsi promised to respect the court's decision, but the state lawsuits authority lodged the appeal which will now be heard next week. Such uncertainty over Egypt's political future along with frequent eruptions of street violence have shaken the country's economic confidence. A senior official of the International Monetary Fund was in Cairo Sunday to discuss a stalled government request for a $4.8 billion loan lifeline. The Administrative Court ruled earlier this month that the upper house of parliament should have returned the amended election law to the Constitutional Court for approval. — Reuters