“The last concern and duty of central bankers is to tell the truth to the public,” says Alan Stuart Blinder, a professor of economics at Princeton University who previously served as vice-chairman of the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors – and is currently considered one of the most influential economists in the world.
The farewell speech of Lebanon's central bank governor Riad Salameh lent credence to Blinder's assertion. His term ended today (31 July 2023) after holding the position for three years. Salameh leaves behind depositors and the fate of their life savings in the hands of a crude ruling elite.
Salameh repeated in his speech that "the state borrowed from the Banque Du Liban (BDL) $20bn,” and “owes it $16bn as a result of several operations carried out by BDL on its behalf;” “these funds aren’t losses incurred by the central bank,” he explained.
“And when the state faces a crisis, the central bank must secure liquidity for it to avoid the collapse of the entire system.”
On the other hand, he added, “the first serious reform steps begin with the abolition of the possibility of the state borrowing from BDL,” in clear contradiction with his practices of providing various types of financing to the treasury from depositors’ savings in foreign currencies.
This violated the law and the legal framework, which allows the BDL to finance the public sector – only in exceptional circumstances and in case of extreme necessity, as well as under a contract between the state and the bank, which needs to be submitted to parliament for approval. These are restrictions that the governor overstepped during his 30-year term.
On the issue of exchange rate stabilisation, the governor stated that this has been going on for more than two decades, based on policy statements prepared by the cabinets to gain votes of confidence in parliament.
In fact, what was needed was a speedy joint decision by the Council of Ministers – which has the constitutional authority to formulate public policies – and the BDL – which sets target exchange rates and their fluctuation ceilings – to be issued after a thorough discussion about the move’s cost and sources of funding.
This never happened.