IMF stresses urgency of reforms in Lebanon to restore economic stability

IMF stresses urgency of reforms in Lebanon to restore economic stability

by Joseph Anthony
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Demonstrators form a human chain during ongoing anti-government protests in Beirut, Lebanon, October 27, 2019. REUTERS/Alkis Konstantinidis

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said it is assessing an emergency reform package announced by Lebanonโ€˜s government last week and stressed reforms should be implemented urgently given the countryโ€™s high debt levels and fiscal deficits.

Lebanon has been swept by over 10 days of protests against a political class accused of corruption, mismanagement of state finances and pushing the country toward an economic collapse unseen since the 1975-90 civil war.

Last week the government unveiled a set of measures aimed partly at appeasing demonstrators and convincing foreign donors it can slash next yearโ€™s budget deficit.

But the emergency reform package failed to persuade demonstrators to leave the streets or investors to halt a plunge in its bonds.

โ€œWeโ€™re studying it, we need to see not only what is in the package but also the timeline of the package for a country like Lebanon that has such high level of debt over GDP (gross domestic product) and high levels of twin deficits,โ€ Jihad Azour, director of the IMFโ€™s Middle East and Central Asia Department told Reuters.

Lebanon has one of the worldโ€™s highest levels of government debt as a share of economic output. The IMF has forecast a fiscal deficit of 9.8% of GDP this year and 11.5% next year.

Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri said the emergency measures introduced last week โ€“ which included the symbolic halving of the salaries of ministers and lawmakers โ€“ might not meet the protestersโ€™ demands but were a start towards achieving some of them.

โ€œFundamental reforms are urgently needed in Lebanon in order to restore macro-economic stability, bring confidence back, stimulate growth and provide some solutions to the issues that were raised by the street,โ€ IMFโ€™s Azour said.

The Lebanese government is planning to accelerate a long-delayed reform of the state-run power sector, which drains $2 billion from the treasury per year while failing to deliver enough power for Lebanese.

Azour said that to restore confidence in the economy some of the long-awaited reforms in the energy and telecom sectors must be โ€œclearly implemented with a very articulate timetable.โ€

He said the fund was in regular discussions with the Lebanese authorities but that they had not asked the IMF to provide programme funding.

REUTERS

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