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Lebanon asks asset management firm to continue work ahead of IMF talks 

September 30, 2021 at 1:36 pm

Michel Aoun, Lebanon’s president, speaks in a prerecorded video during the United Nations General Assembly via live stream in New York, U.S., on Friday, 24 Sept. 2021. [Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images]

Lebanon’s President Michel Aoun today asked Lazard to continue its financial advisory role in preparation for a resumption of talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Reuters reports.

Aoun made his request while receiving a delegation from the company, a statement on the official presidency Twitter account said.

Lebanon is battling a deep economic meltdown that has seen its currency lose around 90 per cent of its value in the past year and propelled three quarters of its population into poverty.

Lazard is the firm that drafted the original financial recovery plan for Lebanon before IMF talks stalled last year.

Aoun stressed during the meeting that the plan should be revised to strengthen Lebanon’s position during the talks as the figures have changed in more than a year.

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Prime Minister Najib Mikati said on Monday he would discuss in a meeting with Lazard how the plan could be developed into a “more realistic” vision for getting the country out of its crisis.

In Lazard’s rescue plan, originally drawn up to help the previous government, losses of some $90 billion in the financial system were identified.

But the plan was shot down by objections from the banks, which said it made them foot too much of the bill for the collapse, in addition to opposition from the central bank and the ruling political elite that got Lebanon into its crisis.

An agreement over the distribution of the huge losses in the financial system, the main sticking point during last year’s negotiations, is seen as key prior to the resumption of talks with the IMF.

Lebanon’s economy minister said yesteray the country’s banking sector, central bank and other players in its financial system were working in “harmony” to agree on the size and distribution of losses sustained during the economic crisis.