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by Executive Editors

The cost of Lebanon’s short ciruits

Electricity shortages in Lebanon cause the economy to lose a total of $5.75 billion every year, according to energy minister Gebran Bassil. The minister also announced that lower fuel oil prices meant the total losses of Lebanon’s state-owned electricity provider, Electricité du Liban (EDL), fell to $1 billion last year, from $1.86 billion in 2008. The minister said that EDL currently employs only 1,930 of the 3,097 full time staff it needs to operate effectively, and is losing 120 to 150 people yearly because of the legal retirement age. Government officials have stated that the average age of an EDL employee stands at around 58 years. Bassil also bemoaned the amount of investment made in the sector by the current and previous governments.“We have only invested $1.5 billion in the electricity sector over the past 18 years while many Arab countries spend this amount every year to upgrade their power stations,” he said, according to press reports. A recent International Monetary Fund working paper has stated that if electricity constraints were reduced to the world average, Lebanon’s economy would grow by 1 percent.

Central bank sitting on a mountain of gold

The World Gold Council (WGC), the global private information association for gold, has stated that Lebanon has the highest reserves of gold in all the Middle East and North Africa. At the end of 2009, Lebanon was registered as having $9.2 billion of gold reserves, making it the world’s 15th largest holder of gold. Lebanon’s reserves also made up 1.1 percent of the world’s total gold reserves at the end of last year, according to the WGC. Banque du Liban, Lebanon’s central bank, uses the gold reserves as a security against unexpected financial fluctuations and as an instrument to stave off any depreciation of the Lebanese lira. The Lebanese government has the official right to liquidate the gold, but most observers agree that the current policy of not selling the gold will continue. The gold reserves at the end of 2009 were equal to around 18 percent of the public debt, according to the finance ministry’s debt estimate, and some 28 percent of gross domestic product at the end of September 2009, as per the WGC.

Poland-Israel arms deal

Israel’s Rafael Advanced Defense Systems has inked a deal with Poland’s Bumar Group to provide manpower and resources for Israeli weapons manufacturing. The deal, said to be worth some $400 million, will result in the joint production of Spike missiles for drones and helicopter gunships. According to Poland’s defense minister Bogdan Klich, the Polish military will also acquire eight Aerostar Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) from Israel’s Aeronautics for around $32 million. The UAV, or drone, has long been a key tool in the military arsenals of both the United States and Israel and is used extensively in Afghanistan, Pakistan and during the 2008/2009 Israeli attack on the Gaza strip. During the period between 1995 and 2009 more than 200 military activities, including joint training and information exchanges, were conducted between the Polish and Israeli armed forces, according to the Polish defense ministry cited in the French language monthly Le Monde Diplomatique.

Syria’s stable economic outlook

The impact of the global economic downturn on the Syrian economy has been “relatively limited,” according to a report released last month by the International Monetary Fund. “Overall real gross domestic product growth is estimated to have decelerated in 2009 by 1 percentage point to about 4 percent. This reflected a slight increase in oil production and a decline in non-oil real growth by 1.5 percentage points to about 4.5 percent over the course of the year. Lower growth in manufacturing, construction and services was partially offset by a moderate recovery in agriculture,” the report stated. Unemployment was seen to have risen to 11 percent in 2009, according to the IMF, after hovering around 8 to 10 percent over the past four years. Conversely, inflation registered at just 2.5 percent in 2009, on the back of falling commodity prices, after reaching levels of around 14 percent in 2008, according to the IMF’s analysis. The fund also estimated that the fiscal deficit widened by 2.5 percent of gross domestic product to 5.5 percent, but that this “was appropriate to mitigate the impact of the global crisis,” cautioning that “fiscal consolidation is necessary going forward.”

Lebanon B.O.P. $7.9 billion in 2009

According to figures released last month by the Banque du Liban, Lebanon’s central bank, the country achieved its highest ever balance of payments (BOP) surplus in 2009, boosted by several economic factors.

Lebanon registered a total BOP surplus of $7.9 billion last year. This was more than double the amount registered in 2008 as capital inflows reached $20.66 billion over the course of 2009 — an increase of 26.6 percent relative to 2008 — according to Bank Audi. Non-resident deposits in Lebanese banks hit $5.1 billion according to Audi, while remittances dropped marginally from $7.18 billion in 2008 to $7 billion in 2009, as per World Bank estimates. The relatively high BOP surplus is also a result of an increase in the net foreign assets of the central bank, reaching $8.69 billion in 2009, offsetting a decline of $794 million in net foreign assets held by banks and financial institutions over the covered period. The balance of trade deficit had reached $11.8 billion in the first 11 months of 2009, according to the Association of Banks in Lebanon.

Lebanon hungry for US goods

A report from the United States Department of Commerce released in February said that Lebanon has a favorable climate for investment, but that bureaucracy and political instability still present barriers. In its Country Commercial Guide for Lebanon, the commerce department noted that Lebanon was the 64th largest market for US exports in 2009, up four spots from 2008, and that in the first nine months of 2009 Lebanon imported $1.1 billion in US goods. The most imported US goods in Lebanon last year were vehicles ($521 million), mineral fuel and oil ($99 million) and machinery ($79 million), as well as electrical appliances and cereals ($26 million each). The report also predicted that the US share of the Lebanese auto market reached 16 percent in 2009. It noted that Lebanon has one of the best educational systems in the region, citing the number of students enrolled in universities inside and outside of the country. Information and communication technology pharmaceuticals, and insurance were identified as having the best business prospects by the US department.

News Corp buys into Rotana

A high-profile deal between Rupert Murdoc’s media conglomerate News Corp and Saudi billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal was signed in late February. The deal will see News Corp, which already includes media giants such as The Wall Street Journal and the right-wing American news channel Fox News, acquire a 9.1 percent stake in Rotana Media Group for $70 million. The deal carries an option for News Corp to increase its share to 18.2 percent in the 18 months after the deal. Rotana already distributes Fox’s channels to the Arab world and has some of the most popular Arab pop stars on its books. Alwaleed’s investments, in particular his stake in Citigroup, took a battering during the financial crisis. Nonetheless, through Kingdom Holding (KH), Alwaleed already owns a 5.7 percent stake in News Corp, according to a statement KH made last year.

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