The National - News

Lebanon’s new budget is better late than never

▶ However, the nation’s problems will not be solved without sweeping and effective reform

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On Friday, the Lebanese parliament finally passed the 2019 budget, nearly a month-and-a-half after the cabinet first submitted the draft. The measures contained within aim to tackle Lebanon’s crushing debt – this small but strategica­lly important nation is the third most indebted in the world – by slashing public spending. This is a condition that the country must fulfil in order to unlock $11 billion of funding pledged by internatio­nal donors at the Cedre conference – a developmen­t initiative for Lebanon, held in Paris last year.

Anywhere else in the world, passing the annual budget nine months late would be an embarrassm­ent, but in Lebanon, this can be broadly considered a success. All parties involved have had to overcome a series of challenges to see the document through to this stage. The country lacked a cabinet for eight months, until January this year, when one was finally formed, and its institutio­ns have been plagued by corruption and mismanagem­ent for decades. The budget also includes an overhaul of the nation’s crumbling electricit­y system. This is a vital move as, according to the IMF, the cost of subsidisin­g the national electricit­y provider Electricit­e du Liban amounts to 40 per cent of Lebanon’s entire debt. Other major drains on the nation’s economy are keeping up repayments on its debts, and public-sector pay. The latter has prompted controvers­ial measures such as slashing end-of-service indemnitie­s of members of the military.

However, such cost cutting in the public sector will not be effective unless rules against cronyism are strengthen­ed and rigidly enforced. With thousands of redundant jobs created to indulge patronage networks, Lebanon’s institutio­ns are not only bloated and inefficien­t, they are a colossal and unnecessar­y drain on public finances. While setting economic goals for this year is a genuine step in the right direction, those objectives must be accompanie­d by effective anti-corruption measures and long-term economic planning. For now, though, Lebanon is showing the world that it is willing to make the sacrifices necessary to build a brighter tomorrow for its citizens.

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