ASSESSMENTS
Lebanon's Profligate Factions Gamble on a Foreign Rescue
Jun 5, 2019 | 10:00 GMT

A protester passes a burning tire during a demonstration over feared pension cuts May 20, 2019, near the government's headquarters in Beirut.
(MARWAN TAHTAH/AFP/Getty Images)
Highlights
- As a result of unsustainable subsidies, youth unemployment, a refugee influx, the economic effects of the Syrian civil war and the strings attached to foreign aid, Lebanon could face an economic crisis if it does not pursue austerity measures.
- But because there is no leader strong enough to impose austerity, Lebanon's factions are more likely to risk an economic crisis than a political one, meaning they will wait for critical foreign aid from powers who wish to prevent another civil war.
- Such a calculation, however, depends on continued regional stability, meaning that a deeper conflict between the United States and Iran could have profound knock-on effects on the Lebanese economy.
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