Libyans Start Using New Exchange Rate

The Central Bank of Libya on Sunday introduced a new unified
exchange rate agreed last month after years of division between rival branches
based on opposing sides of the front line.
As part of the change, the Government of National Accord
(GNA) in Tripoli suspended a fee on foreign currency transactions that it
introduced two years ago to bring the official rate closer to the black market
rate.
The Central Bank of Libya board agreed the new rate of 4.8
dinars to the United States dollar last month in its first full meeting for
five years after splitting as the country divided between western and eastern
factions.
In Tripoli, the black market rate on Sunday was 5 dinars to
the dollar after dropping last week towards the new official rate. "We'll
have to wait three or four months to see how things go at commercial
banks," said Amer, a currency dealer.
Black market exchange shops in the east were mostly closed
on Sunday waiting for the market to settle.
Malik al-Fakhri, an electronics dealer in Benghazi, said he
had stopped using banks after 2013 because he lost too much money importing at
the official rate and turned instead to the black market.
"The most important thing for the trader is
stability," he said.
The new rate is an effective devaluation, meaning the cost
of imported goods are likely to rise.
"This decision is a mistake that will harm citizens
more than benefiting them and is only to satisfy traders," said Hathem
al-Barghathi, also in Benghazi.
The moves are part of a wider effort to resolve economic
obstacles to peacemaking, encourage implementation of previously agreed reforms
and hamper opportunities for corruption.
However, while fighting between the GNA and Khalifa Haftar's
eastern-based Libyan National Army (LNA) mostly stopped in June, diplomatic
progress towards a political solution has slowed.
A ceasefire agreed in October in Geneva has been only partly
implemented, with troops still occupying frontline positions, a main coastal
road still closed and foreign mercenaries remaining in place.
Meanwhile, the LNA has demanded that the monitoring of a
previously-reached ceasefire be limited to “observers” to be agreed upon,
ruling out the possibility of the participation of “international forces”.