Lebanon’s Currency Continues to Tank amid Monetary Chaos

A man counts Lebanese pounds at an exchange shop, in Beirut, Lebanon, Aug. 20, 2018. (AP)
A man counts Lebanese pounds at an exchange shop, in Beirut, Lebanon, Aug. 20, 2018. (AP)
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Lebanon’s Currency Continues to Tank amid Monetary Chaos

A man counts Lebanese pounds at an exchange shop, in Beirut, Lebanon, Aug. 20, 2018. (AP)
A man counts Lebanese pounds at an exchange shop, in Beirut, Lebanon, Aug. 20, 2018. (AP)

Lebanon’s national currency further collapsed Monday, trading on the black market at nearly 20 times its value two years ago, worsening inflation and people’s despair.

The Lebanese pound was trading at 27,000 to the dollar on the black market, hitting a new low in its downward trajectory since October 2019 as the Lebanese economy went into a tailspin. The currency is officially pegged at 1,500 pounds to the dollar.

The economic collapse has been described as one of the worst in the world in over 150 years. Inflation and prices of basic goods have skyrocketed in Lebanon, which imports more than 80% of its basic goods.

Shortages of basic supplies, including fuel and medicine, and restrictions on bank withdrawals and transfers, particularly in foreign currency, have increased the desperation of the Lebanese in the once middle-class country.

Poverty has exponentially increased while the political class, blamed for years of corruption and mismanagement, has failed to offer drastic solutions to the crisis. Negotiations with the International Monetary Fund for a recovery plan have been bogged down in political disagreements and blame trading.

The latest fall in the currency exchange rate follows a central bank directive last week that changed the rate used when depositors make withdrawals from existing dollar accounts to 8,000 pounds to the dollar, up from the previous 3,900 to the dollar.

The directive allowed people to recover money they have not been able to access because of informal capital controls introduced by the banks at the outset of the crisis. But experts said it put more pressure on the national currency because the central bank will print more pounds, further decreasing their value and purchasing power.



Geagea: ‘Resistance Axis’ Dragging Lebanon to Futile War

Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea speaks during Sunday's commemoration. (LF)
Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea speaks during Sunday's commemoration. (LF)
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Geagea: ‘Resistance Axis’ Dragging Lebanon to Futile War

Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea speaks during Sunday's commemoration. (LF)
Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea speaks during Sunday's commemoration. (LF)

Lebanese Forces leader Samir Geagea said on Sunday that discussions after the end of the war on Gaza and the war between Israel and Hezbollah in southern Lebanon must “review everything, except for Lebanon’s borders and its unity.”

Speaking on a commemoration of Lebanese Forces martyrs, he slammed Hezbollah and the Resistance Axis of which it is a part of for “dragging Lebanon in an open futile war.”

The war has been imposed on the Lebanese people and it must stop, he demanded.

He also accused Iran-backed Hezbollah of “exploiting the Palestinian cause to strengthen its interests in Lebanon and the region”.

“The Lebanese people don’t want a war and the government has had no say in it,” he went on to say.

Geagea called on Hezbollah to show some “courage and end the war. This demands a commitment to United Nations Security Council resolution 1701, the deployment of the Lebanese army in the South and limiting the decision to go to war to the state alone.”

“However, if the party insists on pursuing the war, then it alone must suffer the consequences before God, the nation, people and history,” he declared.

Furthermore, he urged the Lebanese government to call on Hezbollah to stop the war.

Turning to the vacuum in the presidency in Lebanon, Geagea criticized parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, saying: “He must act according to his constitutional role, not his political one as an ally to a party [Hezbollah] that has ambitions beyond the presidency and Lebanon.”

He added that the “the road to the presidential palace in Baabda does not pass through Haret Hreik,” an area in Beirut’s southern suburbs - a Hezbollah stronghold.

The road to the presidency also doesn’t pass through Ain al-Tineh - Berri’s residence – and does not follow its conditions. Rather, the presidency must pass through parliament and through the ballot box, stressed Geagea.

Moreover, he reiterated the opposition’s call for holding an open parliamentary session to elect a president.

Priority must be given to electing a president, he demanded, saying this issue is not up to compromise. Berri must call for an open parliamentary session for the election in line with the constitution.