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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
What happened to the Switzerland of the Middle East?
2023-01-21
[An Nahar] Since an unprecedented financial crisis hit Lebanon Hezbollahstan
...a formerly French, now an Iranian colony situated on the eastern Mediterranean, conveniently adjacent to Israel. ...
in late 2019, the currency has lost more than 95 percent of its value and much of the population has been plunged into poverty.

Factional deadlock has left the country largely leaderless in the face of the political and economic turmoil, with a vacant presidency, a central bank chief under European investigation and a government with only caretaker powers.

On Thursday, on the black market, the Lebanese pound fell below the psychologically important threshold of 50,000 to the greenback, dealers said.

The main official exchange rate still pegs the pound at 1,507 to the dollar.

Parliament convened Thursday for an 11th bid to elect a new president, but failed again.

A new study published by the U.N. World Food Program this week found that 1.29 million Lebanese citizens and 700,000 refugees from the conflict in neighboring Syria were food insecure in the last four months of 2022.

It is a huge fall for a country that once boasted the monicker "Switzerland
...home of the Helvetians, famous for cheese, watches, yodeling, and William Tell...
of the Middle East" for its role as a regional financial center.

The worsening political paralysis has Lebanon not only without a president but also with only a caretaker government, stalling a host of economic reforms aimed at stopping wasteful spending and combating rampant corruption.

A senior financial adviser, Michel Kozah, said the Lebanese pound’s worsening deterioration is due to the absence of appropriate measures to stabilize the currency early on in the crisis, including formal capital controls, and a plan approved by the International Monetary Fund.

Instead, he said, there have been short-term policies and circulars from the government and central bank that he describes as a "shot of morphine."

"We gave promises to the IMF but did nothing," Kozah explained. "If you were anywhere else in the world, you wouldn’t get to where you are today because the authorities would have taken measures from day one."

Lebanese authorities in April 2022 reached a tentative agreement with the IMF for a recovery plan conditional on a host of economic reforms and anti-corruption measures. However,
by candlelight every wench is handsome...
the international organization has been critical of Lebanon's sluggish efforts to meet these demands.

Meanwhile,
...back at the wreckage, Captain Poindexter wished he had thought to pack sun block...
Lebanon’s cash-strapped banks continue to impose strict limits on withdrawals of foreign currency, imposed in October 2019, tying up the savings of millions of people. As the economy continues to tank without any reforms, some depositors have resorted to storming bank branches and taking their trapped savings by force.
Posted by:Fred

#11  The Muslims outbred the Christians and Christians emigrated. When there were enough Muslims, the fireworks began.
Posted by: Thruter Gloluger6393   2023-01-21 22:59  

#10  Another case of tragic dirt.
Posted by: M. Murcek    2023-01-21 22:52  

#9  It fell like Humpty Dumpty. You would almost be better off kicking everybody out and starting over.
Posted by: Super Hose   2023-01-21 22:34  

#8  My uncle (married to my Dad's sister) was from Lebanon. He always said how beautiful and what a great place it was, but he moved here in the 1930's when still a teenager.

He had often spoken to family back home over the years and they told him how bad it had become. He told me how sad that made him and it was all due to the 'A-raabs' (as he called them).
Posted by: Mullah Richard   2023-01-21 18:06  

#7  And Beirut was "Paris of the Middle East".

But Chicago and San Fran used to be nice cities, too, from what I've heard.
Posted by: DooDahMan   2023-01-21 11:28  

#6  Was reportedly pretty nice until the PLO (thanks, Yasser!) infected it
Posted by: Frank G   2023-01-21 10:37  

#5  Yes. In my imagination Lebanon smells like a dumpster behind McDonalds baking in the sun on a hot summer day - just like the rest of the ME.
Posted by: Super Hose   2023-01-21 10:23  

#4  /\ In other words, the typical ME country ?
Posted by: Besoeker   2023-01-21 10:17  

#3  I never got a Switzerland vibe from Lebanon. It has always seemed more like a post apocalyptic inner city mall with an Arab slum aesthetic.
Posted by: Super Hose   2023-01-21 10:12  

#2  The problem being, it's in the middle east.
Posted by: ed in texas   2023-01-21 09:58  

#1  Were it not for the thorny problem of what to do with Beirut, Lebanon should long ago have divided into Christian north (with capital at Tripoli) and Muslim south.
Posted by: Slavising Unineting5672   2023-01-21 07:36  

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