Lebanon’s Currency Hits Record Low, Inflation Exceeds 500%

The Lebanese currency continues to fall against the US dollar,
registering its lowest value this week in the parallel market, along with a
sharp rise of fuel prices and inflation exceeding the alarming rate of 500
percent.
In remarks to Asharq Al-Awsat, economic experts and analysts talked
about serious indicators that point to the acceleration of a new and high
inflationary wave that is likely to further destabilize the fragile living
balance.
Analysts agreed on linking three main factors, which are formally
separate but implicitly connected, which together will accelerate the country’s
slide into harsher collapses.
First, analysts pointed to the loss of the executive authority, between
a caretaker government with narrow capabilities and a new government headed by
Prime Minister-designate Saad Hariri, the birth of which is still encountering
complex difficulties.
The second factor is the imminent halting of government subsidies due to
the depletion of the Central Bank’s foreign reserves, in parallel with the
delay in approving the subsidy rationalization plan that ministerial and
administrative committees have worked on completing weeks ago.
As for the third factor, analysts told Asharq Al-Awsat that it is
represented by the end of the deadline for increasing the capital of the banking
system at the end of March, which will cause additional pressure on currencies
in the parallel markets.
Furthermore, the latest data issued by the Central Administration of
Statistics showed an increase in the price inflation index by about 146 percent.
The prices of hotels and restaurants increased by 609 percent, clothing and shoe prices increased by 560 percent, while food prices increased by 60 percent. In addition, transportation prices increased by 206 percent, while furniture, household appliances, and household maintenance increased by 655 percent.