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by Executive Editors

IMF estimates for Lebanon

According to International Monetary Fund estimates, Lebanon registered the second highest growth rate in the Middle East and North Africa behind Qatar last year. The Fund estimated that Lebanon’s economy grew 9 percent in 2009, which placed the country in fourth place globally in terms of real gross domestic product growth. This year the IMF estimated that Lebanon will grow 6 percent, 2.5 percent higher than the MENA region average, and by 4.5 percent in 2011, 0.3 percent below the MENA average. In parallel, the fund estimated that inflation during 2010 would average 5 percent, 1.5 percent below the MENA average. The IMF also forecast Lebanon’s current account deficit at 12.8 percent of GDP, 2.06 percentage points above the finance ministry’s proposed budget deficit for the year. In conclusion, however, the Fund noted that forecast accuracy is mitigated due to Lebanon’s weak statistics regime and stressed that real sector statistics should be provided on a more timely basis.

SME’s lap up loans

Kafalat, the publicly-sponsored financial institution offering loan guarantees for small and medium-sized enterprises in value added sectors, has reported that the value of loans extended to these businesses in the first quarter of 2010 has grown by 57.5 percent year-on-year. The total value of the loans guaranteed by the institution totaled $46.3 million in the first three months of the year. The number of loans also grew by 83 percent, from 214 in the first three months of 2009 to 392 during the same period in 2010. That said, the year-on-year average value per loan decreased 24 percent, to $118,173 per loan. The largest portion of loan guarantees were extended to projects in the agricultural sector, which captured 49.2 percent of total guarantees in the first quarter of the year. The region with the most guarantees was Mount Lebanon, accounting for 39.8 percent of the total number of guarantees over the covered period.

At last – 2008 figures announced

Almost a year and a half after the fact, the government of Lebanon has released official figures for real sector growth in 2008. The figures were compiled by the National Accounts Unit with the aid of the French research firm L’Institut National de la Statistique et des Etudes Economiques (INSEE). The report states that gross domestic product in 2008 reached $29.9 billion, reflecting a real GDP growth of 9.3 percent during the year. The real negative trade balance came in at $8.7 billion in 2008, compared to $6.3 billion in 2007. The figures confirm that commercial services were still the dominant sector in 2008, comprising 33 percent of the economic output, followed by trade (27 percent), construction (13 percent), industry (9 percent), government (9 percent), transport and communications (7 percent), and then agriculture and livestock (6 percent). The only sector that contracted in 2008 was the energy and water sector, with 4 percent sliding down the drain.

Bond boost from ratings firm

The global ratings agency Moody’s has upgraded Lebanon’s government bond ratings from B2 to B1. Last December the agency rated Lebanon as having a positive outlook because of “sustained improvement in external liquidity, the strengthened ability of the country’s resilient banking system to finance fiscal deficits and an amelioration of the domestic political situation following the formation of a consensus government last November.” Moody’s also upgraded the country’s foreign currency bank deposits to B1 from B2 and its country ceiling for foreign currency bonds to Ba3 from B1, while maintaining a stable outlook on sovereign ratings. The agency also stated that increased foreign assets at Banque du Liban, Lebanon’s central bank, “[placed] the country in a more favorable position to absorb financial shocks (including any potential rise in deposit dollarization), while also providing ample cover for the government’s maturing foreign currency debt.” However, Tristan Cooper, vice president and senior credit officer at Moody’s Sovereign Risk Group, cautioned that “despite the recent improving trends, Moody’s notes Lebanon’s significant political and economic vulnerabilities. These include wide twin deficits, a very high public debt overhang, a tense domestic political environment, and the persistent threat of an escalation with Israel.”

Broadband lumbers forward

Telecommunications Minister Charbel Nahas said last month that the project to develop a national fiber-optic network to increase Internet speeds in Lebanon will cost $92.9 million. The announcement was made at a conference on April 12, after the minister had announced in January that the project would cost some $166 million. In March, Executive cited telecommunications experts at the International Telecommunications Union, the United Nations agency for telecommunications, as stating that the project should cost no more than $40 million. Speaking at the conference, Nahas said that $66.3 million had been requested from the Council of Ministers, Lebanon’s cabinet, to start funding the project. The figure is close to the previous minister’s estimate of $64 million to implement the project. Lebanon is still in the process of passing a budget for the year, before which new projects cannot be funded from government coffers. According to Naji Andraos, director general of construction and maintenance, the project requires some 4,000 kilometers of fiber optic cable, most of which will be laid in two “super rings” that will carry the bulk of the data around Lebanon to be transferred to “metro rings” in population areas. The “access layer,” the final crucial link between telecommunications infrastructure and the user, is still being studied by the ministry, which hopes to finish its assessment by mid-2011, according to Abdulmenaim Youssef, the head of Lebanon’s incumbent public operator, Ogero. Youssef also heads the Directorate of Operations and Maintenance at the Ministry of Telecommunications, whose job it is to oversee Ogero’s operations. Without defining the access layer, an accurate financial estimate of how much the project will cost is near impossible. “The tender for the optical backbone and the metro backbone is still in the planning phase,” said Anders Lindblad, president of Ericsson in the Middle East. “Sure there is a budgetary estimate, but the competition [in the vendor market] will determine the price.” He added that the project will likely take 10 to 15 years to complete. In related telecom news, Kamal Shehadi, the chairman of Lebanon’s Telecommunications Regulatory Authority (TRA), has resigned, according to a TRA press release dated April 26.

The LNG alternative

A study by Poten & Partners commissioned by the World Bank has found that liquefied natural gas (LNG) could prove to be an effective solution to Lebanon’s current energy problems. The study stated that Lebanon could relieve itself of its high oil bills by switching the Zahrani combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) power station to LNG, saving the country between $75 million and $80 million a year. The study also stated that while the Beddawi plant in the north of the country was being supplied by the Gasyle 1 pipeline, it would be too expensive to transport gas to the south of the country from the station. Poten & Partners estimated that Lebanon needs 1.5 million to 2 million tons of LNG per year, which could be procured from the expected 80 million extra tons coming online in the global market between 2009 and 2013. If Lebanon acts fast and takes advantage of current market surplus, the firm believes that the country would not have to pay an additional country-specific risk premium and could acquire gas at a price of $7 per million British Thermal Units.

growth for First quarter tourism

The number of tourists who visited Lebanon in the first quarter of this year has grown by 32.1 percent when compared to the same period in 2009, according to Byblos Bank. The total number of tourists who visited the country between January and March came in at 393,212. The lion’s share of tourists came from Arab countries, which accounted for 43.2 percent of total visitors, followed by Europeans (22.5 percent), Asians (21.6 percent), then travelers from the Americas (8.8 percent), Oceania (2.2 percent) and Africa (1.6 percent). Just over 40 percent of the total number of tourists entering Lebanon in the first quarter came in March, which registered 158,411 tourist visits. According to Global Refund, the VAT refund operator, visitors from Saudi Arabia spent the most in Lebanon during the first quarter of this year, comprising 21 percent of all tourist spending. Spending by visitors from Syria also rose by 57 percent year-on-year during the first quarter. The highest product category for tourist spending was fashion and clothing, at 67 percent of the total.  Speaking to the press last month, Fadi Abboud, Lebanon’s tourism minister, stated that Arab visitors account for 70 percent of tourism revenue. According to Abboud, the total amount granted to the ministry to promote Lebanon abroad in the proposed budget is just $4 million. He added that he hopes to raise an equal amount from the private sector and to establish a promotional board for Lebanon between the private and public sectors to promote tourism.

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