The National - News

MOODY’S NEGATIVE OUTLOOK ON LEBANON HIGHLIGHTS ‘NEED TO BEGIN REFORMS’

Country’s Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil responds to latest report released by credit rating agency

- DEENA KAMEL

The decision by rating agency Moody’s Investors Service to change Lebanon’s outlook to negative underscore­s the need to form a new government and carry out reforms, the country’s finance minister said.

Moody’s changed its outlook of Lebanon’s credit rating from stable to negative citing increasing risks to the government’s liquidity position and financial stability, it said in a report on Thursday. It affirmed its B3 rating and said an upgrade to Lebanon’s negative outlook is “unlikely”. Moody’s report “affirms the importance of forming the government and starting reforms to restore confidence, lower the rate of risks and reduce the deficit”, Finance Minister Ali Hassan Khalil tweeted on Friday. “If this is possible now, maybe we will lose that opportunit­y within months if the outlook remains negative.”

Grappling with the world’s third-largest ratio of debt to gross domestic product and an economic slowdown, Lebanon is also caught in the midst of political wrangling as rival factions have been unable to form a new government since parliament­ary elections in May. An influx of more than a million Syrian refugees has exacerbate­d years of economic stagnation.

The World Bank expects Lebanon’s economy to grow one per cent and its debt-to-GDP ratio to reach 155 per cent by year-end, it said in an October report. The political deadlock means stalling fiscal reforms that could unlock $11 billion (Dh40.41bn) in loans pledged during a donor conference in Paris in April.

Without the fiscal consolidat­ion measures and the ensuing internatio­nal loans, Lebanon’s fiscal position would weaken further and contribute to even higher liquidity and financial stability risks, Moody’s said.

While an upgrade to Lebanon’s negative outlook is “unlikely”, Moody’s could change the outlook to stable if significan­t reforms unlocked the public investment package, raised GDP growth prospects and restored investors’ confidence, it said.

Moody’s could downgrade Lebanon’s rating if the government’s ability to access affordable financing is further weakened in the absence of effective fiscal consolidat­ion prospects, it said.

“A further significan­t slowdown in deposits would denote lower policy effectiven­ess and point to increasing risks to financial stability, putting downward pressure on the rating,” according to the report.

Moody’s expects Lebanon’s budget deficit to remain wider for longer than it previously expected, raising the government’s debt burden at a time when bank deposits are slowing. Without any government to implement some fiscal consolidat­ion, the budget deficit is likely to stand at 10.5 per cent of GDP this year, compared to 8.9 per cent of GDP in the earlier forecast, Moody’s said.

The budget could narrow slightly in the next two years to 9.5 per cent and 9 per cent of GDP, it said.

Slower economic growth will increase the pace of public debt expansion at a time when the country can ill afford it.

Persistent­ly wide deficits and large debt refinancin­g needs will keep the government’s borrowing needs above 30 per cent of GDP, Moody’s said.

Companies in Lebanon remained pessimisti­c about the private sector outlook on fears the political situation may not improve and the uncertaint­y would weigh on future output, according to the latest Blominvest Bank’s Purchasing Managers Index.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates