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Deposits up by 4 pct this year: Salameh

Farah-Silvana Kanaan| The Daily Star

 

 

BEIRUT: Central Bank Gov. Riad Salameh said Thursday that Lebanese commercial banks have succeeded in maintaining the inflow of foreign currency deposits with the support of BDL, which helped preserve an acceptable level of economic activity in the country. He said customer deposits had risen by an average of 4 percent. Salameh was speaking at the opening of the annual Arab Banking Conference, this year titled “Public Private Partnership for achieving SDGs,” organized by the Union of Arab Banks.

The governor also projected GDP growth at 2 percent in 2018, very close to average growth in the Middle East and North Africa region.

“The Central Bank has managed, through financial engineering, to preserve monetary stability. BDL will continue to pursue this method, which secured its monetary objectives,” Salameh said.

“The cost of attracting such funds depends on the fluctuation of risks, especially political risk and taking into account the fiscal deficits and inflation. BDL respects market trends in identifying benefits that have reached levels of monetary equilibrium,” the governor said.

He added that the interest rate on deposits in Lebanese pounds is 8.5 percent, while the interest rate on deposits in dollars is 5 percent.

“The interest rate has exceeded this rate in private products representing about 1 percent of total deposits, and does not reflect the general rate of interest base in Lebanon,” Salameh said.

The governor also underlined the importance of partnerships between the public and private sectors. “We hope that the private sector increases its capital so that it has the capacity to participate in PPP projects,” Salameh said.

On the sidelines of the conference, Chairman of the World Union of Arab Bankers Joseph Torbey emphasized that PPP law in Lebanon dates back to less than a year ago.

“It needs implementation decrees so that the private sector and the banking sector can kick off the process. Moreover, since the funding for such projects is of a long-term nature, banks can benefit from risk-sharing schemes and risk guarantees from international bodies and agencies,” he told The Daily Star.

Torbey said that the private sector has the expertise that can largely benefit the public sector.

“In Lebanon, we see no alternative for sustainable growth other than the public and private partnership to ensure the enhancement of the decaying infrastructure in the country. That’s why the government needs to be formed soonest to ensure the needed stability environment for growth and development, and launch the reforms process prerequisite of the CEDRE funds,” he explained.

Torbey warned that regional conflicts and internal disputes were still hindering the private sector from engaging in PPPs. He said the projects that could be started under PPP were numerous and included infrastructure, waste management and electricity initiatives.

“We see that it is imperative that the project management be handled by the private sector to secure expertise, skills and transparency, and that long-term funding be also secured by international organizations,” Torbey said.

He added that transparency should be clearly stipulated in the decrees that the government is expected to draft as soon as it is formed, noting that contracts between parties to PPPs should include clear clauses regarding performance and transparency.

Former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora said PPP projects that will be handled by the new government include the expansion of Rafik Hariri International Airport, the Khaldeh-Okaibeh highway and the Lebanon Cloud Data Center.

Siniora told The Daily Star that the public sector’s future partnerships with the private sector will focus on the electricity issue, although concrete steps have yet to be taken.

“When it comes to water, we have to get used to the fact that ultimately there is a very important role to be played by the private sector. Water is a very limited and nearly depleted resource which we need to manage better,” he added.

Siniora said he was not in a position to comment on whether any concrete plans to cooperate with the private sector to solve the water crisis had materialized in the current caretaker government or if it was being treated as a priority.

Siniora also commented on the impact of corruption on PPP and infrastructure projects.

“When we talk about corruption, there’s a lot to be done [in Lebanon]. There’s an increasing perception in the country of corruption, and this is correct. Effectively, we need to get back to proper systems and approaches to handle this matter by limiting or even eliminating the role of politicians in our administration. There has been a great involvement by politicians to dissect the government and the state and each has played its own part,” he added.

Siniora said loyalty now lies with militias and politicians rather than with the state.

“There is a major decision to be taken. We need to go back to giving credit to meritocracy and respect it as a system of professionalism and an ability to perform,” he said, “and start to think of ourselves as Lebanese first,” he added.