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Al-Ahed Telegram

Lebanon Approves Economic Rescue Plan

Lebanon Approves Economic Rescue Plan
folder_openMiddle East... access_time3 years ago
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By Staff, Agencies

Lebanese Prime Minister Hassan Diab said Lebanon hopes to secure an International Monetary Fund [IMF] aid based on a financial reform plan approved by the government to offset the impact of an ongoing acute economic crisis. 

Diab told reporters after a cabinet session on Thursday that the plan would be used to launch negotiations via its financial adviser Lazard, a leading financial advisory and asset management firm, to restructure the sovereign debt.

"We will use this [plan]... to apply for an IMF program in light of which there will be negotiations," Diab said.

"If we get [IMF support], and God willing we will, it will help us to pass through this difficult economic phase which could be three, four or five years," he said. "The amount [the IMF will give] is up to negotiations."

He also said it would take six to nine months to be clear how much $31 billion of Eurobonds could be reduced.

The finalized reform plan approved by the government on Thursday was not immediately available.

Drafts of the plan have set out vast losses in the financial system, including projections of tens of billions of dollars of losses at the central bank and in the banking system.

Lebanon defaulted on its sovereign debt last month for the first time. Its currency has shed more than half its value and savers have been largely shut out of their deposits since October.

Consumer goods prices in the import-dependent country have shot up by 50% since then.

An official source said the plan did not deal with the value of the Lebanese pound, still pegged at a rate of 1,507.5 to the dollar, even as it has slumped below 4,000 on a parallel market. Diab said the exchange rate was a matter for the central bank, not the government.

The crisis is rooted in decades of bad governance that landed Lebanon with one of the world's biggest public debt burdens.

The economic hardship has infuriated the public and spurred unrest across the country, leading to protests and frequent attacks on banks.

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