In early August, Wassim Mansouri marked his first anniversary as governor of the Bank of Lebanon (officially called the Banque du Liban, or BdL), having stepped up on an interim basis.
He was the deputy to his long-serving predecessor, Riad Salameh, and hopes were high that Mansouri’s background as a lawyer, plus his familiarity with the BdL, made him well-placed to clear up the mess. That mess may have included illegality, depositors having lost access to their money so the BdL could fund the state.
Mansouri gave early hope. He pledged to end the BdL’s adopted role of directly financing day-to-day state spending. But before any taskforce or review could be set up and conducted course, ambiguity crept in.
Reversing course
Suddenly, there was an announcement that the BdL could keep directly financing the state if a law was passed allowing it to do so for urgent needs, or on a temporary basis.
Such exceptions were even considered for foreign currency held at the BdL, which was central to the financial crisis of the Salameh years: dollars deposited with the BdL by commercial banks.
These proposals were made within wider reform plans. These included a clear mechanism for the repayment of the funds loaned to the state. Yet ever since, there has been a growing and deep disappointment that the worries of depositors and the Lebanese public will not be addressed.