Lebanon

2023
Hausmann, R., et al., 2023. Towards a Sustainable Recovery for Lebanon’s Economy.Abstract

Lebanon’s current economic crisis ranks among the worst in recent history. GDP has collapsed by 38% in real terms. The Lebanese lira, which was fixed to the dollar in 1997, has lost more than 98% of its value on the parallel market. The government has defaulted on its debt, and depositors are unable to access their funds held at commercial banks. Consolidated public sector debt, including both government debt and commercial banks’ claims on the Banque du Liban (BdL), represents more than seven times the current GDP. Public services delivery has crumbled. In short, the country is undergoing a debt crisis, a banking crisis, a currency crisis, and a growth collapse. Four years into the crisis, a resolution remains elusive, and each passing day increases the economic and social burdens faced by the population. 

Given the increasing cost of delaying a resolution, we propose a strategy for Lebanon’s economic recovery that addresses all the dimensions of the crisis while recognizing the need to rapidly kick-start the economic recovery. 

Learn more about the Growth Lab's research project on Lebanon. 

Executive Summary: EnglishArabic | French

2023-11-cid-wp-439-lebanon-sustainable-recovery.pdf exec-summary-2023-11-cid-wp-439-lebanon-sustainable-recovery.pdf arabic-exec-summary-2023-11-cid-wp-439-lebanon-sustainable-recovery.pdf french-exec-summary-2023-11-cid-wp-439-lebanon-sustainable-recovery.pdf
2016
Diwan, I. & Haidar, J.I., 2016. Do Political Connections Reduce Job Creation? Evidence from Lebanon.Abstract
Using firm-level census data, we determine how politically-connected firms (PCFs) reduce job creation in Lebanon. After observing that large firms account for the bulk of net job creation, we find that PCFs are larger and create more jobs, but are also less productive, than non-PCFs in their sectors. On a net basis, at the sector-level, each additional PCF reduces jobs created by 7.2% and jobs created by non-PCFs by 11.3%. These findings support the notion that politically-connected firms are used for clientelistic purposes in Lebanon, exchanging privileges for jobs that benefit their patrons’ supporters.
diwan-haidar-rfwp70.pdf