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One
could not visit Lebanon’s numerous tents, without passing by
the enigmatic golden tent of the banking sector. The aura
fabricated by the players - “Leave the banking sector alone!
Don’t mess with it!” - was dispelled a long time ago; there
is no need to recall the torments of Intra Bank and others
in the late 1960’s and then in the 1970s, 1980s and early
1990s. The Lebanese are now used to the tactics of
politicians and bankers : governments borrow and squander
public money and banks dispense it at high interest rates.
Intellectuals, economists and journalists, as well as Paris
1, 2 and 3, praise this arrangement.
The
government, the banking sector, the Banking Monitoring
Agency, the Central Bank and the mass media are all in bed
together. The arrangement becomes more exciting when we see
local and international auditors bestow on banks, financial
institutions and the Central Bank, certificates of good
behavior, while hiding the true figures. At the same time
certain international rating institutions, while classifying
Lebanon as “risky”, continue to praise the “wisdom” of the
Lebanese banking sector leaders.
The
banking sector not only patronizes the Lebanese by
announcing profits of more than $900 million annually, but
it also states that they employ around 16,000 people - for
which we should all be grateful. This is also acclaimed by
presidents, prime ministers and Parliament Speaker(s),
coupled with a mass media campaign to justify the
unequivocal support to banks.
Lebanese
banks have perhaps contributed to the creation of a unique
phenomenon: when the economy is going down, their profits
are going up. Profits grew even during the July 2006 war and
during the period when explosions destabilized the country.
Banks announce the opening of branches here and there with
the main purpose of collecting deposits to be able to fund
governments of waste and corruption and the pretentious and
extravagant lifestyle of some citizens.
These
banks celebrate not only the emigration of Lebanese and the
remittances thereof, but also foreign transfers earmarked to
local parties and politicians.
Do the
Lebanese know that a high percentage of banks’ revenue comes
from “investments” in the Central Bank and loans to the
public sector? Without the governments’ loans, Lebanese
banks would be in peril. A survey conducted by Information
International in March 2005 showed that the majority of
Lebanese were proud of their banking sector, displaying
total lack of understanding that banks’ profits are actually
coming from their own pockets.
Public
money protects the banking sector; a sector which feeds
bankrupt governments in a country of moral bankruptcy and
corruption. This sector, with the assistance of economists,
journalists and politicians, was able to create its own
vocabulary, undecipherable by the ordinary upright citizen.
- “Eurobond” is an expression used and marketed by both
government and Central Bank. Eurobond issues are nothing but
government bills in foreign currencies.
- “External Debt” is an expression intended to suggest that
foreign countries or banks are lending
Lebanon money because “they
trust us”, but the truth is that these debts are loans by
local banks to the Lebanese government in US dollars.
- “Central Bank’s Reserves” is an expression which does not take
into consideration the banks’ obligatory deposits and money
placed by other depositors, nor other financial commitments.
- “If the banking sector collapses, the country will collapse”:
When everyone is exclaiming “God save us if the banking
sector collapses,” the banking sector is saying
“après moi le déluge”
- “Stock Market Surge”: Ten companies controlled by around 20
people celebrating the realization of profits.
- “What is important is trust”: This translates as “I am corrupt
and my eyes are on your pocket. As long as you think that I
am in a good condition, then you will continue to lend me
money.”
- “The bank…is your partner to offer you a car, solar energy or
plastic surgery”: This means “I need to show that I am a
commercial bank that lends to the private sector and
individuals; we, the Lebanese, need to show off.”
- “Interest Rate”: The interest on your savings is always less
than what is declared, while that on your loans is always
higher than what is presumed.
The
moral of the story is that Lebanon went to war for 15 years
and perhaps more, and while the whole country was destroyed
and Beirut’s Central District completely devastated the
Banks’ Street, located between the demolished Parliament and
Serail, survived.
Lebanon
can collapse, but the banking sector will not. |