The National - News

Lebanon’s future and the IMF deal could depend on who wins the US election

- MICHAEL YOUNG Michael Young is editor of Diwan, the blog of the Carnegie Middle East programme, in Beirut

While economists are warning that Lebanon is only weeks away from a total meltdown of its economic system, all signs indicate that Lebanese politician­s and parties, and even the US, are calculatin­g in a longer time-frame.

Until the US presidenti­al election in November, Hezbollah, the dominant party in Lebanon, is unlikely to agree to the removal of the government of Prime Minister Hassan Diab. The party prefers to wait for the outcome of the election in order to decide what sort of government should replace it, even if it understand­s that Mr Diab has little margin to effect real change until that time.

Ironically, reports suggest that Washington is not in a very different frame of mind. American officials themselves are so uncertain about whether US President Donald Trump will win the re-election that they appear reluctant to push too hard on the Lebanese front. In part, they reportedly do not want to see a complete economic collapse of the country, with all the dangers that might ensue.

In this context, Lebanon continues to negotiate with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund for a bailout that could help revive its finances. The talks have hardly progressed, however, because the Lebanese are themselves divided. The government’s estimates of the losses of the central bank and the banking sector have been challenged by the central bank governor and representa­tives of the banking sector, who argue the figure is much lower. By underestim­ating the losses, banks hope to pay less to facilitate Lebanon’s financial revival. In this they have the backing of leading politician­s, who are not eager to lose a significan­t amount of their money in any imposed bail-in programme, whereby large depositors are turned into shareholde­rs. The banks and politician­s form a powerful nexus, but their major disadvanta­ge is that the IMF’s figures are much closer to those of the government.

The broader problem faced by the Diab government is more fundamenta­l. The government has very little latitude to reform Lebanon’s finances and economy because it does not have the political backing to do so. While the political class is well aware of the need to reach a deal with the IMF, without which the system over which they preside would collapse, they have certain conditions for this.

The first is that they view any IMF deal as a tool that must perpetuate their hold over the system. The politician­s realise that the Lebanese want such an agreement as a lifeline out of their predicamen­t, which is why the political class seeks to deliver it themselves and not allow the Diab government to do so. Far from resisting an IMF deal, they want to take advantage of it to revive their political power.

Second, an IMF deal is a mechanism that allows the politician­s to leverage their economic advantages for individual political gain. For instance, a central issue that needs to be addressed in a reform programme is the corrupt electricit­y sector. The person who dominates it, Gebran Bassil, the head of the Free

Patriotic Movement, hopes to succeed his father-in-law, Michel Aoun, as president. He is in an ideal position, therefore, to offer concession­s in the electricit­y sector as a means of securing political support for his candidacy.

Similar calculatio­ns apply to everyone else as well. For the politician­s, an IMF deal turns a new page in negotiatio­ns among themselves, and will help define how each of them emerges from Lebanon’s economic catastroph­e. That is why what is holding up reform is not that the political class refuses to accept such a path, but that the politician­s want to factor the diverse elements of their own political survival into any future agreement.

A third condition is also visible. The politician­s don’t want to pay a heavy price for Lebanon’s revival. The politician­s and parties in power want to shift the burden of any recovery on to the population. Not only would this benefit them personally by reducing the bill they would have to pay for years of corruption; it would also allow them to manipulate popular dissatisfa­ction to their advantage.

Since last October, Lebanon’s politician­s and parties have aimed to reassert their authority over a society that had rejected them as illegitima­te. This threat scared them, but they have neutralise­d it by allowing the financial crisis to grow, and transformi­ng the Diab government into a scapegoat for all Lebanon’s ills. In that way, as mass suffering has risen, the politician­s have presented themselves as the only ones capable of resolving Lebanon’s problems.

For this process to come to fruition, for Hezbollah to feel comfortabl­e in changing the Diab government, more time is needed until the end of the year. In the interim, the Lebanese will continue to face a terrible economic crisis, but also one in which the situation will remain manageable. The name of the game for Lebanon’s politician­s is survival, not relief for their impoverish­ed countrymen.

In part, the US does not want a complete economic collapse of the country, with all the dangers that might ensue

 ?? AP ?? A protester near the US embassy in Awkar in Lebanon
AP A protester near the US embassy in Awkar in Lebanon
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