Lebanon’s economic collapse bites hard in neglected north
Across Lebanon, the proportion of people living in poverty and needing food assistance may hit 70 per cent this year forcing aid groups to urgently refocus their operations
Published: 03:06 PM,Jun 28,2021 | EDITED : 07:06 PM,Jun 28,2021
Taha Riz prepares traditional sweets inside a kitchen of a bakery in Tripoli, Lebanon. — Reuters
TRIPOLI: Taha Riz has worked just three days in more than a month at his Tripoli bakery, in Lebanon’s neglected north where economic meltdown has hit hardest and plunged thousands like him into precarious poverty.
The bakery, like Tripoli itself, survived earlier hardship when sectarian tensions fuelled by the war in neighbouring Syria exploded into clashes on the street outside, but its ovens are now cold and its shelves hold only two bags of flour.
A victim of Lebanon’s economic collapse, Riz says the bakery has slashed its workforce from 25 to two, and he has worked only three days since a religious holiday in mid-May — most recently baking two trays of sweets worth 50,000 Lebanese £, or just $3.30 on the informal market.
“We used to work, now we borrow and spend,” says the 33-year-old father of two daughters, whose wife is expecting a third child soon.
The bakery which used to order flour by the tonne now buys supplies like sugar and ghee in small bags of a few kilos, after demand for its sweet pastries evaporated and people cut their spending to the bare essentials.
“Unfortunately north Lebanon has been hit much more than the other parts of Lebanon. The situation there is very dramatic,” said Bujar Hoxha, Lebanon director for the relief organisation Care International. He said large numbers of businesses had shut and jobs had been wiped out.
Even for those still in work, salaries in dollar terms are worth only a tenth of their 2019 level, while food prices rise relentlessly. The World Bank says Lebanon’s economic collapse is one of the world’s sharpest implosions in modern history.
The caretaker government says it can no longer use foreign reserves to subsidise food and fuel. It hopes to offer financial support to poorer families as it reduces subsidies, but may not have the resources or political authority to deliver it.
Across the country, the proportion of people living in poverty and needing food assistance may hit 70 per cent this year, Hoxha said, forcing aid groups to urgently refocus their operations.
“When Care International entered Lebanon we actually entered to support Syrian refugees,” he said.
After nearly a decade helping Syrians, the organisation saw the Lebanese crisis emerging two years ago. “We readjusted our strategies and reoriented our resources,” he said. The spike in poverty has hit young and old alike. — Reuters
The bakery, like Tripoli itself, survived earlier hardship when sectarian tensions fuelled by the war in neighbouring Syria exploded into clashes on the street outside, but its ovens are now cold and its shelves hold only two bags of flour.
A victim of Lebanon’s economic collapse, Riz says the bakery has slashed its workforce from 25 to two, and he has worked only three days since a religious holiday in mid-May — most recently baking two trays of sweets worth 50,000 Lebanese £, or just $3.30 on the informal market.
“We used to work, now we borrow and spend,” says the 33-year-old father of two daughters, whose wife is expecting a third child soon.
The bakery which used to order flour by the tonne now buys supplies like sugar and ghee in small bags of a few kilos, after demand for its sweet pastries evaporated and people cut their spending to the bare essentials.
“Unfortunately north Lebanon has been hit much more than the other parts of Lebanon. The situation there is very dramatic,” said Bujar Hoxha, Lebanon director for the relief organisation Care International. He said large numbers of businesses had shut and jobs had been wiped out.
Even for those still in work, salaries in dollar terms are worth only a tenth of their 2019 level, while food prices rise relentlessly. The World Bank says Lebanon’s economic collapse is one of the world’s sharpest implosions in modern history.
The caretaker government says it can no longer use foreign reserves to subsidise food and fuel. It hopes to offer financial support to poorer families as it reduces subsidies, but may not have the resources or political authority to deliver it.
Across the country, the proportion of people living in poverty and needing food assistance may hit 70 per cent this year, Hoxha said, forcing aid groups to urgently refocus their operations.
“When Care International entered Lebanon we actually entered to support Syrian refugees,” he said.
After nearly a decade helping Syrians, the organisation saw the Lebanese crisis emerging two years ago. “We readjusted our strategies and reoriented our resources,” he said. The spike in poverty has hit young and old alike. — Reuters