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Society

Q&A – Antoine Abi-Heila

by Ellen Hardy January 3, 2012
written by Ellen Hardy

It all started with a 10-franc copy of “Madame Bovary”. Now Antoine Abi-Heila is ensconced at Bibliopolis, his appointment-only Aladdin’s cave of literary treasures in Beirut’s Ashrafieh neighborhood. A dealer, restorer and polymath, he spoke to Executive about his life surrounded by rare and historical tomes.

How did you succumb to the charm of the first edition?

It’s simple. In the 1970s, at the age of 18, I discovered that a contemporary edition of Madame Bovary by Gustave Flaubert was 10 French francs, and a new edition was the same price. So I preferred to buy the nineteenth century edition in a nice leather binding. I discovered [collecting] early. Books… can’t be compared to other antiquities or antiques. [They] concern the spirit, and the spirit is universal and timeless.

So the content is as important as the material value of the edition?

I compare this to — this is a stupid comparison, but anyhow — when a lady is very nice, beautiful and everything. She puts on makeup, she dresses herself elegantly. But when she makes love, she will be nude, so no use for jewels or makeup. The book is the same. The cover, the illustration, the binding are very important to give attraction, but the most important [thing] is the text in itself. I understand people who only want the text, but I don’t want an e-book. I want shelves, and I want to hold the material, to feel it, nice illustrations. This is to look for perfection.

You specialize particularly in ancient Arabic manuscripts. Are these the most popular items on the regional market for antiquarian texts?

Lebanese bibliophiles are in three classes. You have the people who are fanatic about their country and they want everything related to Lebanon, and [those] who want really landmark universal literature. The third category is the Islamic manuscripts and illuminated Qurans. I have discovered that Saudi businessmen, if they want to make a corporate present, can buy a manuscript for 10, 20 or 30,000 dollars. It expresses something as a social ritual. It means I am an intellectual, I am offering you a book and I consider you as an intellectual person.

You’ll soon be publishing your own historical discovery…

‘The Perfumed Garden’ [by Sheikh al-Nafzawi] is an erotic treatise written in early 15th century Tunis, in Arabic. Four hundred years later, in 1850, a young French officer discovered this manuscript and he translated it into French. He didn’t dare put his name on it, he used a pseudonym, ‘Baron R’. Five years ago, I discovered who Baron R was. I bought the original handwritten manuscript draft in Paris, and I found his name in Arabic. I went to the archives of the Defense Ministry in France with a name: General Jean-Baptiste Campenon. In his file I compared his signature, the script and his background. He was really courageous — it took 10 years for him to translate this from Arabic.

Is there anything in your collection that you’ll never sell?

I had a collection that I said I’d keep, but I sold it two weeks ago. This is a scoop for you… They are very important original documents relating to the conflict of 1860 in Lebanon between the Druze and the Maronites. [A French General] came here with instructions to punish the Druze leaders who committed massacres. This is the whole correspondence he had; for example, the petition sent to him by the widows of Deir El Amar.

For this period [there were no] original documents [in the public domain]. So I sold this to FNB bank [as part of the national] patrimony.

Are there any books or documents you still long to get your hands on?

I am particularly attracted to hand-written historical documents. Right now I am looking for [documents by] Stalin and Hirohito, the previous emperor of Japan, to complete [my collection of] all the antagonists of the Second World War. And Bin Laden, if I can find something by him, is important.

January 3, 2012 0 comments
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Schooling Lebanon’s police

by Nicholas Blanford January 3, 2012
written by Nicholas Blanford

How many times have you sat in a traffic snarl at a road junction in Beirut while a policeman who should be coordinating a free flow of vehicles leans against a dysfunctional traffic light, puffing on a cigarette and chatting to his girlfriend on his cell phone? Well, with a little luck that scenario could soon be a thing of the past if the Internal Security Forces (ISF) chooses to properly implement a newly introduced code of conduct. The little blue book, which is now required reading for everyone in the ISF, explains the obligations and ethical standards to be followed by all policemen. Written in English and Arabic, it includes subject headings such as professional duty, honesty and integrity, impartiality and discipline.

The code of conduct emanates from the United Kingdom and arose from a strategic overview of the needs of the ISF, conducted in 2008. Since the departure of the Syrian army from Lebanon in 2005, Western nations have taken an interest in providing assistance to the Lebanese security services. But, according to diplomatic sources, too much emphasis was initially placed on providing equipment and training on an ad hoc basis, often without coordination among donor countries. For example, the United Arab Emirates stepped in to build new police stations around the country, but the design was that of a private house or villa rather than a functional and secure base to receive and handle prisoners, interrogate suspects and conduct police work, according to the sources. How are you supposed to question a suspect if you have to take them upstairs to a bedroom office? The ISF should have been in a position of making requests to donor countries for specific assistance, rather than simply accepting whatever was given to them.

“The ISF leadership needs to tell donors what they need for the coming three years, so that the ISF can receive specific training and support for the priorities it has developed,” said a diplomatic source familiar with the code of conduct initiative. After conducting a private poll on public attitudes toward the ISF, the British embassy decided to sponsor a project drawing up a new code of conduct to address issues of accountability, internal discipline and professionalism. The aim is to provide a bedrock, if you will, on which physical equipment and training can be properly utilized. The ISF apparently took some time to absorb the importance of the code of conduct but have now embraced it, with senior figures indicating they intend to ensure it is followed through.

Among the possible future changes we could see in the ISF will be proper identity cards carried by the police and identity numbers worn on uniforms. At present, if someone is mistreated by a policeman, the person cannot register a proper complaint because the policeman’s identity is unknown. The ISF’s uniforms may also be replaced to decrease the military appearance of the current mottled blue-gray camouflage pattern. The M-16 and AK-47 rifles usually carried by the ISF could be swapped for automatic pistols, with the larger weapons held out of sight for emergencies. The number of women police officers is set to increase as well and there is talk of instituting a ‘bobby on the beat’ system, similar to the old British tradition of assigning a policemen to patrol allocated neighborhoods on foot to develop personal relationships and trust with the local community. 

Still, changing the way the police force operates requires a cultural shift, not just recommendations in a book. The machinery of Lebanon is lubricated by wasta (or connections), a sadly essential commodity that ensures things get done. But there will be no room for wasta to evade paying parking tickets or other illegal indiscretions if the little blue book is followed to the letter. The police will also have to adopt a proper public complaints system and develop a much sharper internal discipline system. There can be no more appeals to one’s zaim [sectarian leader] to escape disciplinary measures.

It is unquestionably a tall challenge. But the architects of the code of conduct program hope that the recommendations of the little blue book will gradually take hold within the ISF.

 

NICHOLAS BLANFORD is a Beirut-based correspondent for The Christian Science Monitor and The Times of London and author of “Warriors of God: Inside Hezbollah’s Thirty-Year Struggle Against Israel.”

January 3, 2012 0 comments
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Society

Red Alert

by Nadim Mehanna January 3, 2012
written by Nadim Mehanna

Somewhere in a scarlet Ferrari factory in downtown Maranello,  Italy, there are some very smug engineers. Every year the luxury sports car brand unveils a raft of gleaming new models, launching technological breakthroughs that demonstrate the continued development of a much-loved marque and opening up yet more purchasing possibilities… And so now to the Ferrari 458 Spider, unveiled in 2011 at the 64th Frankfurt International Motor Show. The mid-rear engine V8 super car is a world first, featuring as it does a cabriolet roof without compromising the performance of a coupé, thanks to a fully retractable aluminum hard top roof and ultra-sophisticated engineering. By pushing the Ferrari frame ever further, the Spider is an invitation to drivers to combine luxurious, carefree lifestyles with some seriously sporty, aggressive driving that soft-top technology cannot support — a disappointment for some who already invested in the straightforward Italia coupé.

Stripping down from coupé to cabriolet in just 14 seconds, the Spider’s roof is 25kg lighter than a traditional soft-top, and is both quieter and more thermally efficient when closed. There has been no compromise on aerodynamics – the roof adds only 45 kg on the coupé and occupies just 99 liters of space, less than a soft-top. Sliding under a dramatic pair of buttresses behind the seats, the roof’s pieces flip 180 degrees and pile on top of each other, leaving plenty of luggage space.

The buttresses also channel air toward the grilles on the engine cover, maximizing the flow to the intakes, the clutch and gearbox oil radiators, as well as protecting driver and passenger if the car rolls over. The roof also brings the driver closer to that famous Ferrari sound, roaring out through 570 horsepower at 9,000 revs per minute (rpm), accelerating up to 320 kilometers an hour (km/h). The rear window can also be fully opened to enjoy the sound in coupé mode, and the same ‘window’ is an adjustable electric wind deflector positioned between the buttresses, ensuring efficient aerodynamics and reducing buffeting, enabling normal conversation even at speeds as high as 200 km/h. 

Under the hood, the Spider has everything in common with the earlier 458 Italia model, and delivers the same performance despite the technological challenges presented by the roof. Though no longer displayed under a glass engine cover due to safety reasons, the Spider is powered by Ferrari’s 2011 International Engine of the Year. Developed by F1 engineers, the naturally-aspirated direct-injection 4.5-liter V8 engine sprints from 0 to 100 km/h in 3.4 seconds and from 0 to 200 km/h in 10.8 seconds. Ferrari also modified the throttle mapping and suspension tuning to accommodate the cabriolet form, and it is only traveling over very poor roads (like Lebanon’s, sadly) that the driver can feel a mild tremble in the chassis and some vibrations through the windscreen pillars.

While the Spider is proving Ferrari’s ability to forge ahead, the brand is also giving clients the opportunity to add some old-world style to their luxury. The new ‘Tailor-made’ program harks back to the glamour of choice offered to clients in the 1950s and 60s. Exclusive personal designers can customize models with a wide range of cloth trims, colors, finishes and technical materials within the Classica, Scuderia and Inedita collections, giving Ferrari fanatics worldwide the chance to put their own mark on a brand that’s staying ahead of the game.

NADIM MEHANNA is an automotive engineer and the pioneer of motoring on Middle Eastern television since 1992

January 3, 2012 0 comments
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Getting Syria back to work

by Jihad Yazigi January 3, 2012
written by Jihad Yazigi

The Syrian government’s admission in early December that the actual rate of unemployment in the country was anywhere between 22 percent and 30 percent testifies to the depth of the social crisis the society has gone through in the last three decades. The new estimates, provided by Radwan Habib, the minister of labor and social affairs, are at least twice the previously acknowledged rate of 11 percent. According to Habib, the new findings are the result of a field survey conducted by his administration. The fact that the range is so wide — from 22 to 30 percent— raises questions on the quality of the survey, but there is little doubt that the new figures are a more accurate reflection of the situation in the job market than the previous data based on the number of people registered with job offices. According to most analysts, the Syrian economy needs to be growing by 7 to 8 percent a year for its unemployment level to stabilize. This very high threshold is a consequence of the rise in productivity and in the size of the workforce, which increases on average by 3.5 percent every year. People entering the job market today were born 20 years ago, when the population growth rate stood at above 3 percent. Meanwhile, female participation in business activity is also on the rise and increases the number of people seeking to enter the job market – currently estimated at around 200,000 per year.

Indeed, since the early 1980s Syria’s gross domestic product (GDP) has almost never been sufficient to accommodate its expanding workforce. Put another way, Syria has witnessed almost 30 consecutive years of unemployment growth. The challenge before the government — the current one or any forthcoming one — is therefore huge: How to create the conditions for the economy to grow fast enough to meet the demand for jobs.

One solution to the problem would be to focus not only on the level of growth but on its quality, on how to attract investment in the sectors of activity that are most labor-intensive and potentially generate the most added value, such as agriculture and manufacturing. 

This new policy would represent a shift from the priorities of recent years, when Syria’s decision-makers focused on trade liberalization and the development of the services industry. Indeed, finance, tourism, trade and transport, in addition to real estate, have been the main engines of growth in the last few years. Although Syria has much to gain from a strengthening of its services sector, the neglect of farming and industry has cost it dearly in terms of employment, and prevented it from building a strong production base. A lot has already been written on the catastrophic performance of the Syrian agricultural sector, which suffered from several consecutive years of drought starting in 2007 and from poor policy-making decisions, including a steep increase in the price of agricultural inputs when farmers were most in need of help. 

The consequence of all this has been to force tens of thousands of farmers from their ancestral lands and to reduce the contribution of the sector from around 25 percent of GDP to 19 percent in less than a decade. Free trade agreements with Turkey and the Arab world, as well as a general reduction in custom tariffs, have also led to an ‘invasion’ of foreign-made products that put countless industrial plants and workshops out of business and consequently thousands of people out of their jobs. The textile sector, one of the most labor-intensive industries, has been particularly hit by the lifting of the ban on garment imports.

The resolution of this predicament is obviously not only an economic or social issue for the government but it is also political. Unsurprisingly, many of the protests taking place across the country since March 2011 are occurring in the areas most hit by poverty and neglect, such as  Daraa, located at the center of an agricultural plateau in the south of the country, and the poverty belt around Damascus.

There must be no illusions. A happy end to the current protest movement, including the establishment of a democratic political system, will not mean an end to Syria’s economic woes. Syrians must recognize the tremendous challenges ahead and adopt a new economic development strategy that puts employment at its center.

 

JIHAD YAZIGI is editor-in-chief of The Syria Report

* This following sentence was changed from the print edition: "Meanwhile, female participation in business activity is also on the rise and increases the number of people seeking to enter the job market – currently estimated at around 200,000 per year." We regret the error.

January 3, 2012 0 comments
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Society

Discovering Armenia’s palate

by Ellen Hardy January 3, 2012
written by Ellen Hardy

For some it is the smoky strips of blood-red basterma hanging in glass windows in Bourj Hammoud and filling the air with leathery, spicy scents, while others have a weakness for muhammara, rich with walnuts and pepper paste. More still grow misty-eyed at the thought of kafta, drenched in wild cherry sauce and strewn with cashew nuts and fried bread.

Most Beirutis with more than a passing interest in what goes on their plate will be able to name a favorite Armenian dish. But although people of Armenian origin have been in Lebanon for centuries, it’s only in the last few years that they have been drawing attention to themselves as restauranteurs.

The bulk of the Armenian diaspora in Lebanon are descendants of families from Cilicia, a region south of the Anatolian plateau, today in eastern Turkey and northern Syria. During the First World War, the Ottoman Turks pursued a campaign of ethnic cleansing that left some 1.5 million Armenians dead and drove tens of thousands into exile in the Levant; the survivors today in Lebanon are a 150,000-strong community known as much for their commercial industry as for their traumatic history. But if there is one way to pique interest in a people, it’s through food.

Aline Kamakian — co-author of the recent cookbook “Armenian Cuisine” and member of the family behind Mayrig restaurant — says that in her youth, going out to eat Armenian dishes would not have occurred to her. “It was everyday food. Traditionally, it’s always been Armenian mothers who cook.” But as second-generation families loosen up and intermarry, women have more time and independence.

Restaurants with an Armenian twist are therefore thriving on the skills of mothers who have time to spare — the kitchens at Mayrig and Seza are staffed by local women, not chefs — and who fill a need for labor-intensive traditional dishes. Madame Seza, who opened her restaurant a year ago, still idolizes the cuisine of her mother, who “did everything at home, and so well, to perfection.” Now, it is her children who have been re-enthused about the cooking of their forebears through the restaurant. “Before they asked for burgers, now they ask for manteh,” she says.

This flourishing of the cuisine in the public domain is also helping connect Armenians with their homeland and educate outsiders about Armenians and their history. As “Armenian Cuisine” demonstrates, with the recipes come memories, and many dishes — hummus with basterma here, pastries from Latakia there — are expressions of long geographical dislocation.

Rich variety and demand support flourishing restaurants across Beirut. There’s a familial welcome and bistro atmosphere at Onno in Bourj Hammoud, boutique design and ladies in lace headscarves at Seza in Mar Mikhael and seu beureg with a side of jazz at Razz’zz in Hamra. Now two of the more long-standing (and pricey) outfits — Mayrig and Al Mayass — are expanding, taking Cilicia’s heritage global. Kamakian is plotting a central kitchen in Europe that will be able to supply branches in Paris and beyond with food as skillfully produced as it is at Mayrig in Beirut, where “everything is handmade, mum’s doing it.” Al Mayass has had a branch in Kuwait since 2008, and is introducing four more outlets in the UAE and New York next year.

And so the cuisine of Cilicia, which tells the story of a country lost and countries gained through smoky meats and spices, is taking on new commercial and cultural significance. “When you’re eating the food and someone is telling you this is Armenian but the name is in Turkish,” says Kamakian, “the first question is, ‘Why? What happened?’ You’re opening a door for a million people to smell, taste, listen to what is Armenia. You’re moving all the senses through a simple dish.”

January 3, 2012 0 comments
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A Salafist surprise

by Jonathan Wright January 3, 2012
written by Jonathan Wright

There’s nothing like free and fair elections for finding out what people really think, and the big surprise of the Egyptian elections, the first since the overthrow of President Hosni Mubarak last February, has been the strong level of public support for the Muslim Salafist movement, the conservatives whose overwhelming priority is to emulate the behavior of the Prophet Muhammad and his seventh century companions.  Ironically, most of the outsiders who predicted the Salafist gains were Islamophobic Americans and Europeans who based their expectations on visceral disdain for the judgment of Egyptian voters, rather than on any knowledge of the country. Those closer to the electoral battlefield, on the other hand, including Egyptian political scientists and pundits, expected the Salafists to win only about 10 percent of the vote.  After the first of three rounds of voting, the Nour Party alone, the most successful of the Salafist groups, had taken more than 24 percent, in second place behind the Muslim Brotherhood but well ahead of any liberal-secular group. The political scientists have some excuses: psephology, the science of elections, is in its infancy in Egypt and the rest of the Middle East, along with the related sciences of opinion polling and market surveying. Besides, in a society where speaking one’s mind in public could be unwise, whatever polling did take place was liable to misrepresent reality. 

Journalists and proto-psephologists have come up with a variety of reasons why the Salafists have proven so unexpectedly popular. One of the most promising lines of enquiry is that the Salafist sympathizers have been there all along, at about the weight suggested in the elections, but they took a tactical decision many years ago not to take part in the political process. Researcher Nathan Field notes that in work he did on television viewing in Egypt in 2008, Salafist stations were clearly drawing higher ratings than any others but no channels existed for this preference to find political expression. 

With the collapse of the old regime, the Salafists made a sudden and concerted switch into political activist mode, taking advantage of new networks to meet and discuss topics such as Muslim orthopraxy in everyday life. Anecdotal evidence from individual Salafist voters corroborates this theory, though some of them have said they cooperated with and voted for the Muslim Brotherhood, for want of a better alternative, in previous elections. Salafist voters have also emphasized their personal acquaintanceship with the candidates they favor, suggesting a well-established social nexus at the local level. Another explanation is that politics in Egypt, as in many developing countries, has always been skewed toward the urban elite to the disadvantage of the rural poor, many of whom are illiterate and disengaged from central government. Under the Mubarak regime, the rural poor could easily be persuaded, bribed, coerced or intimidated into voting for the ruling party, but in 2011, with the field wide open and no guidance from authorities, they turned to those they knew and trusted. At some polling stations in the countryside, whole neighborhoods appeared to be voting for the Nour Party, but without any overt regimentation by the party’s operatives. The Salafists’ opponents and detractors have attributed the success of the Nour Party to large injections of Saudi cash, both to run its campaigns and to finance hand-outs of basic foodstuffs to the poor — a common electoral practice by many candidates. Newspapers say the ruling military council has collected details of all foreign payments that might have helped political parties or candidates, but until they release them it is hard to assess the impact. Field’s research quotes Jamal Khashoggi, a journalist close to the Saudi government, as saying the Saudis are not in the business of encouraging other Islamist alternatives, so it is hard to see what they would gain from financing the Egyptian Salafists. Wikileaks evidence, on the other hand, suggests that the Saudi government has spread its largesse quite widely among Arab politicians, to keep them on its side. 

The sudden switch from political quietism to a new role as the second largest group in parliament has not been a smooth one. Leading members of the Nour Party have sent enough mixed signals in recent weeks to seriously discredit most political movements in ordinary times — especially on alcohol, tourism, the economy and personal freedoms. But the party has struck a chord that no other group has touched, a chord that many did not even know existed.

 

JONATHAN WRIGHT is managing editor of Arab Media and Society

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Society

Finance for thought

by Paul Cochrane January 3, 2012
written by Paul Cochrane

In the years since the credit crisis erupted in 2007 there has been a steady flurry of economic and financial books published claiming to tackle the root causes of what some have dubbed ‘The New Great Depression’, offer alternatives to the current financial system or provide warnings of the inherent dangers still facing the world economy. With the beginning of a new year that has dark storm clouds still crackling with lightning and thunder over the global economy, Executive has selected four of the most thought-provoking economic books printed in the past year to prime the reader for the challenges ahead.

Debunking Economics

Revised and Expanded Edition: The Naked Emperor Dethroned?

A book by Steve Keen

‘Debunking Economics’ has been a critical and commercial success since it was published in 2001, largely due to Australian economist Steve Keen’s withering critique of the neo-classical economic theories that have dominated policy since the 1970s. His claims are also given more weight by the fact that he predicted the 2008 financial crisis well in advance.

In a newly revised edition, Keen hammers the point home that mainstream economists, as well as central bankers, deserve no credit for the boom years prior to the crash but should shoulder the blame for the crisis and its aftermath. Through a pioneering explanatory statistical model, Keen argues that classical economic thought has little to contribute to what is known as Reality Economics, which is more cause-and-effect than assumption based. He argues that the near hegemonic adoption of a narrow-minded approach to economics in academia, which is then carried into professional life, is at the core of the problem, with those supposed to be implementing a cure still theoretically blinkered, evident in counterproductive solutions such as bailing out the banks and quantitative easing.

Keen’s historical and economic analysis of what went wrong are worth delving into, yet it is his alternatives that will interest the reader mulling options to get us out of the current maelstrom. He proposes radical changes, such as reducing or wiping out private debt through a widespread amnesty and, heretical though it may sound, the temporary nationalization of the American financial system.

It is doubtful whether Keen’s voice will be heard amid the hullabaloo, particularly as the United States enters an election year; as John Maynard Keynes pertinently remarked in 1935: “The difficulty lies, not in the new ideas, but in escaping from the old ones.”

The Quest

Energy, Security and the Remaking of the Modern World

A book by Daniel Yergin

Daniel Yergin is renowned for his Pulitzer Prize-winning ‘The Prize’,  which charted the rise of the world’s insatiable thirst for black gold as far as the first Gulf War in 1990. ‘The Quest’ picks up where he left off and ventures into the “Great Game” for energy following the break-up of the Soviet Union, the emergence of national oil companies from emerging markets like India and China and the dirty world of oil politics in the twenty-first century. He tackles the effects of the United States’ invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq on energy security and assesses the twisted reasons for the oil price spike between 2004 and 2008. As in ‘The Prize’, ‘The Quest’ shows why understanding the geopolitics of energy is essential to comprehending the world today, and where we may be going next. He discusses how new technologies and high oil prices are making previously untappable oil reserves accessible, although at significant environmental cost. Such ramped up output in the US, Canada and Brazil — each to some 3 million barrels per day by 2020 — could well change the ‘oil world order,’ particularly the West’s problematic reliance on the Middle East, he argues. And while Yergin is no believer in the ‘peak oil’ theory — arguably a flaw in his analysis — this does not stop him discussing at length the need for alternative energy sources, and how potentially disruptive technologies could be game changers in global politics and security.

Poor Economics

A Radical Rethinking of the Way to Fight Global Poverty

A book by Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo

‘Poor Economics’ focuses not on Wall Street and the problems of the financial markets — the “1 percent” as the Occupy Wall Street protesters have labeled them — but rather the poorest of the world’s poor; not the three billion people that live on less than $2.50 a day but the billion surviving on less than a buck.

The focus is on how the poor respond to aid strategies, based on empirical research in 49 countries carried out over 15 years. What is radical about their work is that Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo draw their findings from actually listening to and understanding the needs and behavior of the poor. Why, for instance, do people buy a TV and go hungry, or prioritize the education of one child over the rest of their offspring?

Moreover, their research is into what has worked in development economics and what has not: micro-finance is not the cure-all it is championed to be and higher rates of literacy and schooling do not necessarily equate to economic development and prosperity. As the inequality gap widens, addressing global poverty is a pressing issue for governments, development agencies and businesses. Banerjee and Duflo tell us where our attention needs to be, and it is no wonder their book won the Financial Times and Goldman Sachs Business Book of the Year Award for “the most compelling insight… into modern business issues.”

Currency Wars

The Making of the Next Global Crisis

A book by James Rickards

We are in the early stages of Currency War III, according to veteran financier James Rickards. The first currency war (CW) was between 1921-1936, and CW II took place from 1967, beginning in the lead up to the end of the gold standard in 1970 and culminating in the 1987 stock market crash.

Rickards argues that the United States has instigated CW III through the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing policy — printing dollars to boost base money supply to get the economy out of recession. But by doing so, “the Fed has effectively declared currency war on the world” and the result is stagflation — stagnant growth and high inflation — and the world going deeper into financial crisis.

According to estimates, the US dollar comprises 61 percent of identified official foreign currency reserves, while the euro represents 26 percent. What happens to the dollar is of prime importance and the trends are worrying. The dollar’s position has declined from 71 percent in 2000, and stands to fall further as American power is challenged, confidence in the greenback weakens and more countries change their reserve currencies, as Russia and others have threatened to do.

Rickards uses possible scenarios — as played out at a Pentagon-organized financial war game — to highlight what a currency war entails and it is eyebrow-raising reading. The end result could be the dollar joining a crowd of multiple reserve currencies (MRCs), although all major currencies have recently devalued in parallel against gold, and in fact MRCs could exacerbate rather than alleviate the currency war. The other alternative is the International Monetary Fund pushes for greater adoption of its “world money”, Special Drawing Rights. The final possibility is the dollar will be “rejuvenated by gold or descend into chaos with both redemptive and terminal possibilities.”

Rickards suggests a return to the gold standard to retain stability, of money backed by something tangible, not paper or digits on a screen. Yet, however this currency war plays out Rickards warns that it “is the most meaningful struggle in the world today — the one struggle that determines the outcome of all others.”

January 3, 2012 0 comments
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Economics & Policy

Q&A – Fadi Abboud

by Executive Staff January 1, 2012
written by Executive Staff

As minister of tourism, Fadi Abboud has seen Lebanon through the heyday of visitor arrivals in 2010 to the more barren roads of 2011, as well as the change in government from last year to this. At the helm of one of the most underfunded ministries in the government while overseeing an industry accounting for nearly a quarter of the country’s gross domestic product, Abboud pulled no punches when laying out the challenges for tourism in Lebanon as he sat down for an exclusive one-on-one with Executive.

E  Following a fantastic 2010, how bad was 2011 for tourism? 
We broke all records in 2010. Some 2.2 million tourists visited Lebanon, with total tourist spending up to an estimated $8 billion. In 2011, I think we will be down by some 300,000 tourists, most of whom come by road. Because of what happened in Syria, we lost roughly some 100,000 Jordanians, 100,000 Iranians and 100,000 Gulf Arabs. However, total spending in 2011 seems up, though I should add that buying residential property is included in tourism spending. What may also play a role is the fact that we are a dollar-based economy, and the euro went down.

E  What has been done or what could have been done to counter the negative consequences of the Syrian crisis?
In all honesty, we should have taken some measures much earlier, but we did not do anything to compensate what we lost by road. For example, we could have had planes to Jordan for $50 a flight. Most Iranians only come for 24 to 48 hours, as part of a trip to Syria, and they do not spend much. But I think we could work harder in attracting the some 1.5 million Iranians who visit Turkey. In other words, we should attract more Iranians flying to Lebanon. Generally speaking, we are not taking advantage of what is happening around us. We should grasp the opportunity to, for example, build a civil airport in the Bekaa Valley, or use the existing airport to create a regional hub for so-called low-cost carriers. I just came back from the World Travel Market in London, where I had a word with Monarch, which is one of the smallest low-cost carriers in the world. Still, with 34 jets and a turnover of some $1.3 billion, it is twice the size of MEA (Middle East Airlines). On average, they offer a return ticket from London to Cyprus for some $450. Compare that to flights to Lebanon. Also, open the travel section of the Sunday Times and you can fly anywhere in the world on a package deal. But not to Lebanon. As long as we have a monopoly in Lebanon, or a duopoly between MEA and BMI (British Midland International), which is technically bankrupt, prices will not come down. 

E  External factors aside, what do you think is the main internal problem facing the Lebanese tourism industry?  
I’d say a lack of professionalism. Lebanon is like a mezze. You eat a bit of everything but you never get full. For example, we have a casino, but we are not a gambling destination. Our casino is more like a hospital to treat the locals. We have ski slopes, but are not a skiing destination. Do you know any skiing destination in the world that does not have snow cannons? With all due respect, these days we can no longer rely on God alone. Another problem is that the owners of the separate ski stations do not want to cooperate. Yet to create a true ski destination we need lifts from Faqra all the way to the Cedars and snow cannons. Then, and only then, can we become a ski destination.
Likewise, we are not a Mediterranean destination. We need a coastal resort, where you have all the facilities in one place not to get bored for a few weeks. We are not a serious religious destination, even though we have all the sites in the world and no less than four saints. We are not even a serious destination in terms of nightlife. I’ll be frank, a lot of people come here for prostitution, yet the Emirates have much more to offer. In terms of diving we have the Victoria, the only ship in the world in a vertical position, and underwater archeology at Tyre, yet we are not a diving destination. Even when it comes to hiking, we do not take things seriously.   There are a lot of jacks-of-all-trades anywhere in the world, yet people want professionalism. We do not take anything seriously. And that is what I’m trying to change. In Arabic we have a saying ‘you do not drink from a well and throw a stone.’ I am embarrassed to say what we throw in this well. It is not just stones. It is rubbish. Tourism represents 22 percent of our GDP. We should invest in it. You cannot create an industry if you do not promote it.

E  Talking about promotion, what happened to the LL5,000 ($3.33) airport tax you suggested in 2010? 
It did not happen. It was refused as usual. It was meant to be an extra LL5,000 departure tax, which would have enabled us to promote Lebanon. But the whole 2010 budget was refused, including the extra tax. It was not even debated properly. The Ministry of Finance always emphasizes the unity of the budget, but, personally, I don’t see what a LL5,000 promotion tax has to do with the budget of, say, the CDR (Council for Development and Reconstruction).

E  What is the budget of the ministry?
It’s ridiculous. It’s less than $20 million, which includes all wages. It is by far not enough to promote the country. But suppose they give me $30 million, even then I cannot spend them. If I tell the World Travel Market I want to participate and ask if I can pay six months later, they will ask me politely to f*** off. For a stand at a fair you pay up front, regardless of what is the official way of doing things in Lebanon.

E  Will attracting more Western tourists be difficult considering travel warnings issued by many Western embassies?
Usually, we are not in the market of mass tourism. We cannot compete really. That does not mean we only want jet setters staying in 5-star hotels in Solidere. I love them, don’t get me wrong, but we cannot only rely on them. Fortunately, most educated people in the West know that these travel warnings are political. For example, why did England not issue a travel ban when earlier this year two young Britons were massacred in [Florida]? Is Beirut more dangerous than Bogota? I feel safer in Beirut with an expensive watch than in London, Paris or any city in the United States. Now, I don’t think these bans and warnings are working, but is it making our life any easier? No, not at all.

E  In a few words, how would you describe 2011?
2011 was not as good as 2010, yet it could have been much worse. Overall, certainly seeing what is happening in countries around us, I’m happy.

E  What to expect for 2012?
Of course, security is very important, but all things being equal, 2012 could be a good year. But, unfortunately, we are experts in losing opportunities. We have an excellent opportunity to build our position. We are currently one of the safest countries in the region. We should grasp this opportunity. 

E  What are the main challenges?
Well, regional politics of course. Look, if I were responsible for Israeli security I would have only one thing on my mind: a Shiite-Sunni war. Israel is usually very good at studying our weak points, and that is one of our weak points. Today, with the rise of Sunni fundamentalism everywhere, it is very feasible to instigate such a conflict. And the US would be happy with that, as they need a market to sell their weapons. If this scenario becomes reality, all hell will break loose.   Closer to home, we really need to redefine tourism in Lebanon. We really need to become a serious destination for the hiker, the religious tourist, the diver, etc. We really need world-class facilities. In addition, I strongly believe that monopolies, and the sisters and brothers of monopolies, are still controlling the Lebanese economy. This has to stop. I don’t believe that Lebanon should have just one casino, one airport and one port. We have to free the travel market, especially when it comes to flights. If you talk to tourism professionals in Jordan and Egypt, they will tell you that they could only break their records once they broke the travel monopoly. If we don’t free the market, we will never substantially expand.

January 1, 2012 0 comments
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Tourism

Fadi Abboud

by Executive Editors December 25, 2011
written by Executive Editors

A s minister of tourism, Fadi Abboud has seen Lebanon through the heyday of visitor arrivals in 2010 to the more barren roads of 2011, as well as the change in government from last year to this. At the helm of one of the most underfunded ministries in the government while overseeing an industry accounting for nearly a quarter of the country’s gross domestic product, Abboud pulled no punches when laying out the challenges for tourism in Lebanon as he sat down for an exclusive one-on-one with Executive.

  • Following a fantastic 2010, how bad was 2011 for tourism? 

We broke all records in 2010. Some 2.2 million tourists visited Lebanon, with total tourist spending up to an estimated $8 billion. In 2011, I think we will be down by some 300,000 tourists, most of whom come by road. Because of what happened in Syria, we lost roughly some 100,000 Jordanians, 100,000 Iranians and 100,000 Gulf Arabs. However, total spending in 2011 seems up, though I should add that buying residential property is included in tourism spending. What may also play a role is the fact that we are a dollar-based economy, and the euro went down.

  • What has been done or what could have been done to counter the negative consequences of the Syrian crisis?

In all honesty, we should have taken some measures much earlier, but we did not do anything to compensate what we lost by road. For example, we could have had planes to Jordan for $50 a flight. Most Iranians only come for 24 to 48 hours, as part of a trip to Syria, and they do not spend much. But I think we could work harder in attracting the some 1.5 million Iranians who visit Turkey. In other words, we should attract more Iranians flying to Lebanon. Generally speaking, we are not taking advantage of what is happening around us. We should grasp the opportunity to, for example, build a civil airport in the Bekaa Valley, or use the existing airport to create a regional hub for so-called low-cost carriers. I just came back from the World Travel Market in London, where I had a word with Monarch, which is one of the smallest low-cost carriers in the world. Still, with 34 jets and a turnover of some $1.3 billion, it is twice the size of MEA (Middle East Airlines). On average, they offer a return ticket from London to Cyprus for some $450. Compare that to flights to Lebanon. Also, open the travel section of the Sunday Times and you can fly anywhere in the world on a package deal. But not to Lebanon. As long as we have a monopoly in Lebanon, or a duopoly between MEA and BMI (British Midland International), which is technically bankrupt, prices will not come down. 

  • External factors aside, what do you think is the main internal problem facing the Lebanese tourism industry?  

I’d say a lack of professionalism. Lebanon is like a mezze. You eat a bit of everything but you never get full. For example, we have a casino, but we are not a gambling destination. Our casino is more like a hospital to treat the locals. We have ski slopes, but are not a skiing destination. Do you know any skiing destination in the world that does not have snow cannons? With all due respect, these days we can no longer rely on God alone. Another problem is that the owners of the separate ski stations do not want to cooperate. Yet to create a true ski destination we need lifts from Faqra all the way to the Cedars and snow cannons. Then, and only then, can we become a ski destination.

Likewise, we are not a Mediterranean destination. We need a coastal resort, where you have all the facilities in one place not to get bored for a few weeks. We are not a serious religious destination, even though we have all the sites in the world and no less than four saints. We are not even a serious destination in terms of nightlife. I’ll be frank, a lot of people come here for prostitution, yet the Emirates have much more to offer. In terms of diving we have the Victoria, the only ship in the world in a vertical position, and underwater archeology at Tyre, yet we are not a diving destination. Even when it comes to hiking, we do not take things seriously.   There are a lot of jacks-of-all-trades anywhere in the world, yet people want professionalism. We do not take anything seriously. And that is what I’m trying to change. In Arabic we have a saying ‘you do not drink from a well and throw a stone.’ I am embarrassed to say what we throw in this well. It is not just stones. It is rubbish. Tourism represents 22 percent of our GDP. We should invest in it. You cannot create an industry if you do not promote it.

  • Talking about promotion, what happened to the LL5,000 ($3.33) airport tax you suggested in 2010? 

It did not happen. It was refused as usual. It was meant to be an extra LL5,000 departure tax, which would have enabled us to promote Lebanon. But the whole 2010 budget was refused, including the extra tax. It was not even debated properly. The Ministry of Finance always emphasizes the unity of the budget, but, personally, I don’t see what a LL5,000 promotion tax has to do with the budget of, say, the CDR (Council for Development and Reconstruction).

  • What is the budget of the ministry?

It’s ridiculous. It’s less than $20 million, which includes all wages. It is by far not enough to promote the country. But suppose they give me $30 million, even then I cannot spend them. If I tell the World Travel Market I want to participate and ask if I can pay six months later, they will ask me politely to f*** off. For a stand at a fair you pay up front, regardless of what is the official way of doing things in Lebanon.

  • Will attracting more Western tourists be difficult considering travel warnings issued by many Western embassies?  

Usually, we are not in the market of mass tourism. We cannot compete really. That does not mean we only want jet setters staying in 5-star hotels in Solidere. I love them, don’t get me wrong, but we cannot only rely on them. Fortunately, most educated people in the West know that these travel warnings are political. For example, why did England not issue a travel ban when earlier this year two young Britons were massacred in [Florida]? Is Beirut more dangerous than Bogota? I feel safer in Beirut with an expensive watch than in London, Paris or any city in the United States. Now, I don’t think these bans and warnings are working, but is it making our life any easier? No, not at all.

  • In a few words, how would you describe 2011?

2011 was not as good as 2010, yet it could have been much worse. Overall, certainly seeing what is happening in countries around us, I’m happy.

  • What to expect for 2012?

Of course, security is very important, but all things being equal, 2012 could be a good year. But, unfortunately, we are experts in losing opportunities. We have an excellent opportunity to build our position. We are currently one of the safest countries in the region. We should grasp this opportunity. 

  • What are the main challenges?

Well, regional politics of course. Look, if I were responsible for Israeli security I would have only one thing on my mind: a Shiite-Sunni war. Israel is usually very good at studying our weak points, and that is one of our weak points. Today, with the rise of Sunni fundamentalism everywhere, it is very feasible to instigate such a conflict. And the US would be happy with that, as they need a market to sell their weapons. If this scenario becomes reality, all hell will break loose.   Closer to home, we really need to redefine tourism in Lebanon. We really need to become a serious destination for the hiker, the religious tourist, the diver, etc. We really need world-class facilities. In addition, I strongly believe that monopolies, and the sisters and brothers of monopolies, are still controlling the Lebanese economy. This has to stop. I don’t believe that Lebanon should have just one casino, one airport and one port. We have to free the travel market, especially when it comes to flights. If you talk to tourism professionals in Jordan and Egypt, they will tell you that they could only break their records once they broke the travel monopoly. If we don’t free the market, we will never substantially expand.

December 25, 2011 0 comments
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Real estate

Business talk

by Executive Editors December 25, 2011
written by Executive Editors
Zardman: Guy Manoukian, CEO

“Beirut is reaching its normal prices, but it’s still undervalued compared to Jordan, Syria and all the countries around us, although not as undervalued as the Metn [area]. The most undervalued area for me is the Mechref area [south of Beirut]; it’s nicer than Rabieh and Faqra, and I think it’s on the way up.”

Capstone Investment Group: Ziad Maalouf, CEO

“We have only seen a slowdown in sales but it has not affected prices of land, which remain high. Expectations of landowners keep increasing despite new realities in the market today. If I were to buy land today in Ashrafieh, I would have to sell at a starting price above $6,000 per square meter, which should not  be the case… The owners have to readjust their expectations to market realities. Since 2005, land prices have increased exponentially per year, so they assume that this will continue. But that was when Lebanon was underpriced in the region; it’s not true anymore. Growth of land prices and apartment prices should be around 5 percent per year, if there is any at all.”

Seven Invest Developers: Fawaz Sawaf, Director 

“The biggest problem in Ashrafieh is parking. The government is trying to improve roads in Ashrafieh, but it wasn’t originally made for this many cars, if all the buildings come up in the area.”

FFA Real Estate: Mireille Korab Abi Nasr, Head of Sales and Marketing

“While prices have generally risen for the past several years, in 2011 we have noticed a standstill in the market in some areas which has caused some developers to resort to giving discounts to sell their apartments. This is all due to the mismatch between the market needs and the supply. This has been the case especially with large-scale apartments. The market will always correct itself, and this is very healthy in order to regain the balance between supply and demand.”

Ramco Real Estate Services: Karim Makaram, Director

“A couple of years ago, a project would have sold half by the time excavation was complete… The absorption rate would have been 80 percent by the time it was delivered; now it is about 60 percent. But if you’re selling the right size in the right area, there is still demand.”

Benchmark Real Estate: Zina Dajani, Managing Director

“Last year you could get a 5 percent or 10 percent discount at best, if you are a serious buyer, except at the launching of new projects where discounts were more substantial. This year, buyers are expecting around 20 percent and 25 percent discounts and are making counter offers to developers before they accept a deal. Given that the sales momentum has slowed down, these numbers may have been achievable in some projects.”

Prime Consult: Massaad Fares, General Manager

“Clients tend to be more selective; they know what they are looking for… the ones interested in city living tend to require mostly smaller sizes but very sophisticated buildings. Being environmentally friendly is very important [and] tall buildings are becoming more and more interesting as views of the city can be guaranteed, and as you know this is not always available. Environmentally friendly projects and gated communities will be more and more in demand.”

December 25, 2011 0 comments
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Since its first edition emerged on the newsstands in 1999, Executive Magazine has been dedicated to providing its readers with the most up-to-date local and regional business news. Executive is a monthly business magazine that offers readers in-depth analyses on the Lebanese world of commerce, covering all the major sectors – from banking, finance, and insurance to technology, tourism, hospitality, media, and retail.

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