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Take my money, please

by Kirsten Vance

Imagine being a poor student- not too difficult for those of us

who were once there. Your boots are falling apart and winter

is on its way, some of your clothes are so tattered they should

really be chucked out and replaced, while bare necessities like toilet

paper and food have to be stretched out to last, especially at the

end of each month. Then imagine you are the recipient of healthy

sums of money – student loans and cash from the parents, both

offered at pretty favorable terms. But you can’t get your act

together enough to actually spend it, so mom, dad and the government

have to keep encouraging you, pushing you to make use

of the money. Ludicrous, right?

Absurd as it may sound, Lebanon is that student. Of the $4.5 billion

in foreign funds that were available at the end 1999, almost half had

still not been contracted. “Sometimes you feel that you have to push

them to use it,” says Paolo Dionisi, economic and commercial attaché

at the Italian embassy. “It’s the opposite of how it should be.”

Last year was in keeping with Lebanon’s poor track record of the

previous three years, while there has been no significant improvement

in 2000 despite an effort by the council for development and

reconstruction (CDR) to speed up the process of project preparation.

”There is a stockpile of financing available, that’s not being committed,”

says Christian DeClercq, senior advisor to the UN’s resident

coordinator in Lebanon. Even once committed to specific projects,

the level of expenditures is sometimes still low. The slow rate at which

Lebanon uses foreign financing could put it at risk of losing some of

the funds and of attracting new money in the future.

Since the early 1990s, Lebanon has been a recipient of large

amounts of aid largely from the EU and the Arab world, while non aid

financing has come primarily from the World Bank and the

European Investment Bank. For a cash-strapped, indebted country that

is still in the process of post-war reconstruction, foreign funds represent

a vital source of financing. “It’s very important if you have hundreds

of millions of dollars pulled back because the government’s not spending,”

says a financial analyst, “especially when the country needs to

spend in order to bring itself up from Banana Republic grade three to

Banana Republic grade four.”

Even more important is that much of the unused stash is in the

form of grants and soft loans. More than two-thirds of the stockpile

carries extremely attractive financing conditions, according to

a report by the United Nations Development Program (UNDP).

“Soft loans and grants are more difficult to come by,” says

DeClercq. “Lebanon has really benefited from an important amount of goodwill on the part of donors and every effort should

be made to translate that into action so that more resources can be

made available in support of reconstruction.”

Not surprisingly, many point to the weak Lebanese administration

as the prime culprit for the backlog. “It goes back to the administrative

inefficiencies of this country,” says the analyst, “to the ill equipped

administration, the uneducated administration and totally

corrupt bureaucracy.” While the vast majority of funds are channeled

through the CDR, there is often a problem of coordination with

other ministries as a single project can involve numerous government

institutions. And within the government institutions themselves,

there is a limited capacity, often due to an insufficient number of qualified

staff. The political decision-making process can also create

major bottlenecks, according to donors, because even the simplest

decision may require the signature of the minister responsible, the

approval of the council of ministers or passage through parliament.

On top of all that, due to the government’s austerity policy, there are

often not enough counterpart funds. Investment to GDP stood at 20%

last year, compared to 33% in 1995.

But not all the blame can be lumped onto the lap of the Lebanese

government. “Also the donors have to do their part,” says

DeClercq, “because many of the delays have involved donors.”

That is due to complicated review and approval processes or

unrealistic expectations because donors were ill advised of the situation.

In addition, some aid comes with conditions of structural

reform. There is also the issue of tied aid – when contracts can only

be awarded to companies from the donor country in question, which

may not guarantee the best prices on tenders. According to

Bassam Othman, resident representative for the Kuwait Fund for

Arab Economic Development (KFAED), donors shouldn’t be

unbending. “You have to be flexible, you have to understand how

things get done in Lebanon,” he says. ‘Tm sure they’re genuine

about helping Lebanon and implementing these projects, but

maybe they have to go out of their way sometimes.”

Kuwait has been one of Lebanon’s largest sources of cash, with

about$416 million in soft loans and grants since the end of the war.

Projects it has helped finance include the Beirut airport, the north

and south entrances into Beirut and the construction of health care

centers. Kuwait is one of the few donors not reporting delays. “Most

of our projects are on time. They’ re disbursed according to schedule

and we don’t have any substantial delays,” says Othman.

“When you compare the implementation of these projects with other

countries, Lebanon isn’t behind.” Others say that the relative ease

for the Kuwait and other Arab funds comes from the fact that they

finance comparatively easier projects – basic infrastructure that

doesn’t involve capacity building in administration or projects that

are self-contained like roads or hospitals.

Many others aren’t having an easy time convincing Lebanon to

spend their money. Some like France have given time limits, which

forced the Lebanese government to work hard to meet the deadline

in order to have the protocols signed into commitments. A$ I 00 million

soft loan from Spain, that was originally made available in 1998,

was renewed last summer for another two years. At the World Bank,

Lebanon’s loan portfolio totaled $750.44 million at the end of the

fiscal year on June 30, but just $289.91 million had been disbursed.

The two loans signed this year are not yet effective, but half

of the remaining ten are considered unsatisfactory.

While closing dates can be extended, that is an unlikely event for.non-performing

loans, according to John Wetter, the bank’s country economist.

Japan has had a soft loan agreement worth $120 million on the books

since March 1997. The agreement’s deadline is 2003, but Yukinobu

Miyakoda, the economy attaché at the Japanese embassy, was expecting

the funds to be disbursed by last year. A delegation from the Japanese

Bank for International Cooperation was sent to Lebanon several

times to push for the money to be used. In February and June of this

year the two lenders were finally completed, but the money still hasn’t

been used. Until that happens, more funds will not be forthcoming.

It’s a similar story with the Italians, who will not agree to more

funds until there has been clear progress made in Lebanon’s

efforts to spend the $145.25 million in soft loans and grants available

through agreements signed in 1997 and 1998. The loans

carry an interest rate of 0.5%, a 35-year repayment period and grace

periods of 14 and 24 years, respectively. With such attractive

terms, one would expect the Lebanese government to scramble for

these funds. But it took 18 months just to get the first agreement

passed through parliament, and 10 months for the second. So far

only about 30% of the money has been used. “Now things are

beginning to move, but if they had done everything in due time they

could have negotiated another loan,” says Dionisi.

Clearly, there must be a more efficient use of foreign funds. The

Italians recently established a working committee with the CDR in

order to push things through. Efforts have also been made to streamline

bureaucracy at the EU; of the 184 million euros in grants made

available through MEDA I (1996-1999) just 40% has been used,

while 33 million euros of that amount is still awaiting signatures. “In

Brussels we have done our homework to simplify the procedures,

because this was also a problem,” says Dmitris Kourkoulas, head of

the EU delegation in Lebanon. Now the donors want to see a concerted

effort on the part of the Lebanese government to reform the

administration and reactivate investments. And unless that happens,

it will be difficult to convince the international community that throwing

new money this way will be of any use.

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