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Lebanon economic crisis worsened by vested interests, IMF says

Lebanon economic crisis worsened by vested interests, IMF says
A protester holds placards outside Bank of Beirut during a protest demanding the release of depositors' trapped savings, in Beirut, Lebanon. (File/AP)
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Updated 29 June 2023

Lebanon economic crisis worsened by vested interests, IMF says

Lebanon economic crisis worsened by vested interests, IMF says
  • Lebanon signed an agreement with the IMF in April 2022 but has not met the conditions to secure a full $3 billion financing program
  • The IMF said that without reforms, public debt could reach 547 percent of GDP by 2027

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s financial crisis has been aggravated by vested interests resisting crucial reforms, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Thursday, warning that no action could lead the country “down an unpredictable road.”
The nearly four-year economic meltdown has cost the local currency roughly 98 percent of its value, seen GDP contract by 40 percent, pushed inflation into triple-digits and drained two-thirds of the central bank’s foreign currency reserves, the IMF said.
The figures came as part of its Article IV report, a comprehensive assessment of Lebanon’s finances.
The IMF said the crisis had been compounded “by a failure to take much needed policy action, hampered by a lasting political crisis and resistance from vested interests to reforms.”
Lebanon signed an agreement with the IMF in April 2022 but has not met the conditions to secure a full $3 billion financing program, seen as crucial to a recovery from one of the worst economic collapses in modern history.
The IMF said the steps Lebanon had tried so far, including the 2022 budget and a banking secrecy law fell short of the advice given by IMF staff or the expectations discussed.

BACKGROUND

The IMF report said current public debt above 280 percent of GDP was already ‘unsustainable,’ and without reforms it could reach 547 percent by 2027.

The IMF said the steps Lebanon had tried so far, including the 2022 budget and a banking secrecy law, fell short of the advice given by IMF staff, or their expectations.

Mission chief Ernesto Rigo told reporters that Lebanon’s leaders may face a “temptation” to avoid difficult political decisions and may hope the economy stabilizes without reforms, but that it would come at a “very high cost.”
“The situation is very dire,” he said.
The report said delayed reforms had led to a decrease in the foreign currency deposits that could eventually be recovered when the banking sector is restructured, with depositors effectively having lost $10 billion compared to 2020.
Lebanese politicians often say depositors’ rights must be preserved in any plan to address losses of some $70 billion in the financial system.
The IMF said that without reforms, public debt could reach 547 percent of GDP by 2027. It said current debt levels, above 280 percent of GDP, were already “unsustainable.”
“The continuation of the status quo presents the largest risk to Lebanon’s economic and social stability, taking the country down an unpredictable road,” the report said, adding the central bank needed new policies on conflicts of interest, more autonomy from government and more accountability.