Lebanese Currency, Lira, Hits New Historic Low Of 100,000 To The U.S. Dollar

A patient rests on a bed in a hallway of the Rafic Hariri University Hospital (RHUH) in Lebanon's capital Beirut on July 23, 2021. - Lebanon's crashing economy has piled pressure on hospitals, leaving them increasingly ill-equipped to face any new wave of the novel coronavirus, a top hospital director has warned. (Photo by STR / AFP)

Lebanon’s currency hit a new low of 100,000 to the US dollar on Tuesday, according to the unofficial market rates used by most of the country.

The Lebanese lira has continuously depreciated since nationwide anti-government protests rocked the country in 2019, followed by the catastrophic Beirut blast and COVID-19 in 2020.

Embattled Central Bank Gov. Riad Salameh had pegged the lira to the US dollar at a rate of 1,500 since the late 90s.

The peg was finally changed last month, but at 15,000 to the dollar,

A run on banks coupled with corruption and years of mismanagement by the political elite has led Lebanon into what the World Bank has dubbed as one of the worst economic crises in history.

The country has also had no president and a fully functioning government since November.

Meanwhile, a shortage of medicine and other staples has forced over 70 percent of the population into poverty and driven thousands to flee for a better future abroad.

Al Arabiya News

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