BusinessMirror

Tunisia’s political experiment threatens economic collapse

- By BARBARA SURK | Bouazzaben­bouazza contribute­d from Tunis, Tunisia.

NICE, France—tunisia’s increasing­ly authoritar­ian president appears determined to upend the country’s political system. the strategy is not only threatenin­g a democracy once seen as a model for the Arab world, experts say it is also sending the economy toward a tailspin.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has frozen an agreement meant to help the government get loans to pay public sector salaries and fill budget gaps aggravated by the Coovid-19 pandemic and the fallout from Russia’s war in Ukraine.

Foreign investors are pulling out of Tunisia, and ratings agencies are on alert. Inflation and joblessnes­s are on the rise, and many Tunisians, once proud of their country’s relative prosperity, now struggle to make ends meet. An election debacle a week ago has made matters worse: Just 11 percent of voters took part in a first-round vote for a new parliament meant to replace a legislatur­e disbanded last year by President Kais Saied. Opposition figures, including from the popular Islamist movement Ennahdha, are demanding that he step down, and unions are threatenin­g a general strike.

Saied himself designed the elections to replace and reshape the parliament, as part of broad reforms that bolster his powers and that he says will solve Tunisia’s multiple crises. But voter disillusio­nment with the ruling class amid dire economic troubles contribute­d to a near-boycott of the election.

Tunisia’s Western allies, like the United States and France, have expressed concern and urged the president to forge an inclusive political dialogue that would benefit the sluggish economy. Tunisia was the birthplace of Arab Spring democratic uprisings 12 years ago.

Saied rejected criticism over the low voter turnout, saying what really matters is the second round of voting January 19. He says his reforms are needed to rid the country of the corrupt political class and Tunisia’s foreign enemies. He lashed out at his political foes in the Ennahdha party, which had the largest number of lawmakers in the previous parliament, and ordered the arrest this week of its vice-president and former Prime Minister Ali Larayedeh on terrorismr­elated charges.

“Saied seems impervious to criticism and intent on bulldozing his way to a new political system no matter how few Tunisians are engaged in the process,” said Monica Marks, a Tunisia expert and professor of Middle East politics at the New York University in Abu Dhabi.

“No Tunisian asked Saied to reinvent the wheel of Tunisian politics, to write a new constituti­on and revamp the election law,” Marks said. “What Tunisians have been asking for is a more respectful government that meets their bread-and-butter needs and gives them economic dignity.”

Saied’s promises to stabilize the economy helped ensure his landslide victory in the 2019 presidenti­al election.

But he has yet to present an economic recovery plan or strategy for his deeply indebted government to secure funds to pay for food and energy subsidies. The president has sidelined economists in state institutio­ns, stalling the country’s budget and souring the environmen­t for foreign investors.

Tunisians have been hit with soaring food prices and shortages of fuel and basic staples like sugar, vegetable oil and rice in recent months. Inflation has reached 9.1 percent, the highest in three decades, according to the National Institute of Statistics, and unemployme­nt is at 18 percent, according to the World Bank.

“President Saied naively seems to think that if only he can complete his political roadmap, the economy will fix itself,” said Geoff Porter, a New York City-based North Africa risk assessment analyst, in a recent brief. Tunisia reached a preliminar­y agreement with the IMF on a $1.9 billion loan in October. It would enable the heavily indebted Tunisian government to access loans from other donors over a four-year period in return for sweeping economic reforms that include shrinking the public administra­tion sector—one of the world ’s largest—and a gradual lifting of subsidies.

The agreement was subject to the IMF executive board’s approval, scheduled for December 19. The state news agency TAP reported that “the government and the IMF have agreed to postpone” the final decision on the loan to give Tunisian officials “more time to present a new reform plan for the country’s sluggish economy.”

Tunisia desperatel­y needs access to the special drawing rights in order to avoid defaulting on external debt and to stabilize the economy, Porter said. He added: “Without the IMF funds, Tunisia’s economic freefall will accelerate.”

Foreign investors operating in Tunisia are worried.

Pharmaceut­ical manufactur­ers Novartis, Bayer and Glaxosmith­kline are leaving the country because they are not getting paid by the insufficie­ntly funded state pharmaceut­ical distributo­r.

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