Business activity in Lebanon’s private sector rose to its highest level in eight months in February amid a slower decline in output and new orders.
The Blom Lebanon Purchasing Managers’ Index, which measures operating conditions in the country’s private sector, rose to 47.5 in February from 47.1 in January, and its highest level since last June. However, it remained below the 50 mark that separates growth from contraction.
Facing the current political and economic challenges in Lebanon, businesses continued to report a decline in output levels during February, but the rate of contraction in business activity was the weakest since May.
“All indices witnessed relative improvement, with the stock of purchases even exceeding 50. Though the climate of business remains challenging, the resumption of government meetings coupled with the recent exchange rate appreciations have injected a bit of energy into the economy,” Ali Bolbol, chief economist and head of research at Blom Bank, said.
“It remains to be seen, however, whether this heightened activity can prove sustainable and push the PMI to 50 or higher, given the absence still of any reforms and an agreement with the International Monetary Fund.
“Most likely, when these occur along with prolonged political stability, we can perhaps say then that the Lebanese economy has turned the corner,” he added.
Lebanon’s economic depression, orchestrated by the country’s elite, is among the worst economic collapses since the 1850s and is disintegrating key pillars of its postwar economy, the World Bank said in January.
The country’s real gross domestic product is estimated to have declined by 10.5 per cent in 2021, on the back of a 21.4 per cent contraction in 2020, the Washington-based lender said in its latest Lebanon Economic Monitor.
The complex nature of the Lebanese crisis requires a comprehensive social, economic and financial reform programme to stabilise the economy, International Monetary Fund staff said after the conclusion of online mission meetings with Lebanese authorities in February.
The value of Lebanon’s currency against the US dollar plunged more than 90 per cent after the government defaulted on about $31 billion of Eurobonds, accelerating the country’s economic decline into what the World Bank called last year a “deliberate depression”. Inflation soared to 155 per cent last year, with about 80 per cent of the country’s population living below the poverty line.
Lebanese officials began much-delayed talks with the IMF on January 24 about support measures to lift the country out of its economic crisis.
New orders also declined in February, with companies citing weak purchasing power among domestic customers and liquidity issues. Meanwhile, new work from international clients also decreased.
Companies fractionally reduced staffing numbers to cope with weak domestic purchasing power and cash flow issues, the latest survey of Lebanese private sector sentiment found. The large majority of companies kept their staffing levels unchanged since January.
Firms’ input costs increased, which was largely attributed to rising commodity prices and a weak domestic currency against the US dollar.
The survey found an expansion in stocks of inputs during February. The build-up of inventories was mild, but the strongest in a year, according to Blom Bank.
Supplier performance moved closer to stabilising during February.
Bank Morgan Stanley to cut 1,600 jobs
Bank Morgan Stanley is cutting about 1,600 jobs or roughly 2% of its global workforce, joining other big banks in making reductions as the economy slows. The news comes after chief executive James Gorman warned that the bank would see "modest" job losses. He cast the...
Civil groups file request for EU and US sanctions on corrupt Lebanese leaders
A Swiss foundation and a Lebanese NGO on Monday sought to pressure western countries into imposing sanctions on Lebanese leaders by filing legal petitions at the US Treasury and two European Union bodies, three years into the small Mediterranean country's worst-ever...
Over half of Lebanon’s GDP comes from remittances, report says
Of those households, 32 per cent reported that without remittances, they could not cover expenses. Forty-one per cent told the Mercy Corps, a humanitarian NGO, that they could not cover most basic needs without financial help from abroad. Households receive...
Cuyahoga County approves $5 million innovation fund with Cleveland Foundation to stop overdose deaths, as guided by forthcoming advisory committee
Cuyahoga County Council on Tuesday voted to turn over $5 million to the Cleveland Foundation to fund innovative solutions to the county’s opioid epidemic. What those new strategies will be or how much money they receive will largely be up to a 9-member advisory...
Submit your event
We will be happy to share your events. Please email us the details and pictures at publish@profilenewsohio.com
Address
P.O. Box: 311001 Independance, Ohio, 44131
Call Us
+1 (216) 269 3272
Email Us
Publish@profilenewsohio.com