Have you ever been annoyed when your old LL100,000 note wont fit snugly into your wallet? But are you also put off by the toy money appearance of Lebanon’s new look paper money? If the answer to both questions is yes, it is worth reminding you that the latter is a solution to the former and part of Lebanon’s drive to be in monetary harmony with Europe and the US.
Abdo Ayoub, Lebanon’s leading bank note collector (or notaphilist) and author of Lebanon: paper money and coins, stands up and pulls out his wallet. He folds a crisp new LL50,000 and slips it inside. “You see? It fits,” he explains flashing the wallet from side to side like a conjurer. “Wallets are smaller because notes are smaller. Our notes are now too big, so we have to be in step with today’s trends.”
So for all of you who thought this was example of legendary Lebanese wastage – another case of “it isn’t broke and yet we are still fixing it with money we can’t afford” – it is in fact one of the rare instances when the public sector (in this case the central bank) is actually doing its job.
So sadly no conspiracy theory. “It was the natural time to print new money and it offered the central bank a window of opportunity to make new, user-friendly notes. They are not changing all at once but waiting till each note runs out of stock before they print new ones,” explains Ayoub.
The first three new notes appeared in June (LL5,000) and mid-July (LL50,000 and LL100,000). It is totally dependent on what is in circulation and what is demanded by the central bank. “There is no need to renew for the sake of it,” explains Ayoub, who cites the LL1,000 as a case in point. “It will probably only appear in 2007 as there are possibly as much as 200 million old notes still in their packet.” This extraordinary surplus is a hangover from the heady days of inflation when the government went bonkers and printed 960 million LL1,000 notes. “It was too much for one country,” says Ayoub. “It means that everyone can have in his pocket 250,000 in single notes. It will take time to use up. They are of a highest quality because they were printed by Thomas de la Rue, arguably the best quality notes in the world.”
Ayoub is sitting in his vast library cum office at his home in Bhannes. On the floor are notes and coins and bits of old notes. Albums full of series of Lebanese banks notes line the shelves, a testament to his hobby and passion of the past 15 years. He claims he has always been a habitual collector. “If you don’t leave your country during war, you need something to do.”
Back to the new money. “We needed a model. It was either the Euro or the [US] Dollar. There are 400 million people using the Euro. That is a lot of people. Money is used less and credit cards more. Therefore the money that is used should be more practical. Governor Salameh is a cosmopolitan man and he must have spotted this trend.” According to Ayoub, the Central Bank did consider making its new notes according to the same dimensions as the Dollar with all denominations the same size. “It just wasn’t practical, especially for old people who might get confused or make mistakes.”
So they went with the Euro model. The new notes have been shrunk to a similar, but not exact, size to the Euro, what Ayoub calls “the same spirit of the euro”. The idea was to correspond Lebanon’s six notes to the closet Euro denomination. Thus the LL1,000 (the only note that will receive a totally new design) is sized according to the current 5 euro; the LL5,000 with the 10 euro; the LL10,000 with the 20 euro, the LL20,000 with the 50 euro, the LL50,000 with the 100 euro and the LL100,000 with the 200 euro. There is no Lebanese equivalent to the either 500 euro note or the 1 and 2 euro coins. “The cost was negligible,” explains Ayoub. “We are constantly reprinting, so it would just be [the cost of] the design, which is not much if you divide it by the number of notes.”
So why does a government decide to renew it’s money? According to Ayoub, the lifespan of a particular design is about 15 years. Since 1920 till today Lebanon has had six different designs, the longest lasting being the 1964-to 88, which depicted Lebanon’s, historical and tourist sights and which was virtually worthless by wartime inflation. “It is now considered among the most beautiful series in the world, but you would need 1000 of these,” he opens an album of LL1 notes, “to buy a manouche today.”
In, 1988 the LL1,000 (printed again in 1991 and 1992) was introduced as was the single-issue LL500. Further inflation made the LL1,000 increasingly cumbersome (remember having to pay for dinner with big wads of bills?) and so between 1993 and 1994 the LL5,000, LL10,000, LL20,000, LL50,000 and LL100,000 notes appeared.
“That series is now roughly ten years old. These new notes are not strictly a new design, but they should be around until 2020, although who knows, we might have a new governor who decides to change everything and say ‘I don’t like this’ and he can do it because provided he does it at the right time, it doesn’t cost anything.”
And the paper is better too by all accounts. “With the first new notes, we were coming out of war and we did not have the money to spend like we did before, when we would go to Thomas de la Rue & Co in London or Banque de France,” remembers Ayoub. “In 1992, it was a case of just do it they put out the tender and got the cheapest price from the Canadian printer B.A.Banknote.”
This time the government has gone to German company Giesecke & Devrient (LL1,000, LL5,000 and the LL10,000 and the Austrian Œbs (LL20,000, LL50,000 and LL100,000). And how long will the notes last in circulation last? “The cheapest notes, say from India or Pakistan, last about six months in circulation while the best can survive for around ten years,” explains Ayoub. “In my opinion, ours will probably last somewhere in between.”
Ayoub wanders off and comes back with a ultraviolet light. It puts a new LL50,000 note under its beams. It lights up like a Christmas tree. “You see we have a lot more security features. Printing has become more advanced. A new printer costs $10 million.”
According to Ayoub, both old and new notes will be in circulation for the next two of three years and even when the old are withdrawn, the central bank is still obliged to exchange it. “You can take any more from any period, even this,” he says holding up a LL250 note, “and they will give you a coin.” He pulls an album off the shelf and flick through the pages. “In fact you can do more. You can do this.” He opens an album and shows me a beautiful 250 lira note from (year?)XXXX. “If you take it to the central bank they will give you a coin but to collectors it is worth $10-12,000.”
Lebanon: paper money and coins is available from XXXX