The dollar crisis is destroying the farming industry in Lebanon. Farmers are struggling to cover even 20 percent of their agricultural costs.
A 60-year-old man died by suicide this morning on Hamra Street, where a Lebanese flag, a clean judicial record, and...
With no clear solutions to Lebanon's economic crisis in sight, the possibility of famine is the latest addition to the country's bleak future.
The Lebanese workforce is taking the hit of the collapsing economy.
The national currency needs to be prevented from total collapse, and this needs to be done in a pragmatic and gradual approach with a clear bias towards protecting the interests of the majority of the population against the predatory behavior of the ruling cartel.
Because of a crumbling economy and COVID-19, people in Lebanon have rediscovered a love of farming. Can the agricultural return carry our economy forward?
Protests erupted across Lebanon on the evening of Thursday, June 11 as the local currency hit an unprecedented exchange rate...
Abou Arab reviewed its decision in light of the "relative stability" of the dollar in the past few days and the possible subsidization of food.
The IMF is Lebanon’s fastest and most dangerous course of action.
The freefall of the Lebanese lira in past months has caused a significant increase in the prices of basic goods...
Lebanon is looking for over $10 billion from the IMF, but that's an ambitious figure considering international donors' distrust in the government.
Workers in Lebanon accept occupational hazards because they are too busy trying to feed their families, and policy-makers disregard them.