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Lebanon Business Conditions Deteriorate

Lebanon’s debt-to-GDP ratio could  balloon to 180% by 2023.
Lebanon’s debt-to-GDP ratio could  balloon to 180% by 2023.

Lebanon’s business conditions worsened to near a two-year low as political instability and cash flow issues took a toll on the private sector, according to a new survey.

Blominvest Bank’s Purchasing Managers Index fell to 45.4 in July from 46 in June, the weakest reading since October 2016, said the survey, sponsored by the lender and complied by IHS Markit, Bloomberg reported.

A reading below 50 indicates contraction and above 50 signals expansion in the private sector economy.

“According to panelists, the uncertain political landscape, combined with cash flow issues, reportedly weighed on demand conditions in July,” said the lender’s report. “Survey data signaled the sharpest decline in new business for 21 months. Sales to international clients were also reduced, as instability at a broader regional level impacted foreign demand.”

Lebanon, which is saddled with the Middle East and North African region’s highest debt-to-GDP ratio of about 150%, is struggling to boost growth and control its finances amid political wrangling over the formation of a new government and the hosting of over one million Syrian refugees.

Prime minister-designate Saad Hariri has been appointed to form a government following the May parliamentary elections—the first to be held since 2009—and has emphasized the importance of proceeding with long-delayed economic reforms.

Lebanon’s debt-to-GDP ratio could balloon to 180% by 2023 if the government does not undertake reforms to narrow its fiscal deficit, which may reach 10% of GDP amid the current geopolitical tensions, the IMF said in February.

In April, donors from various countries pledged at the Cedre investment conference in Paris to provide Lebanon with over $11 billion in soft loans to mainly fund infrastructure projects. The pledges were linked to reforms, which include lowering the fiscal deficit by 1 percentage point annually over five years among other measures.

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