PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Harvard report proposes comprehensive plan for Lebanon’s economic recovery

Researchers at the Growth Lab unveil a four-point plan to address Lebanon’s economic crisis

2023-11-30
(Press-News.org) Harvard's Growth Lab has released a new report on Lebanon's struggling economy that revisits the origins of the crisis and proposes a comprehensive plan for a swift economic recovery. The research project, led by Professors Ricardo Hausmann, Ugo Panizza, and Carmen Reinhart, provides a clear diagnostic of the ongoing crisis and suggests novel, out-of-the box solutions. 

The research highlights the unusual depth of Lebanon’s economic collapse. According to Professor Hausmann, “Lebanon faces a triple financial crisis: its currency has collapsed, its banking system is bankrupt, and the government has defaulted on its debt. The result is one of the most severe economic collapses in recent history.” Four years into the crisis, real output plummeted by 38%, the local currency has lost 98% of its value, and the country has suffered from very high inflation. Lebanese citizens are unable to access the funds they hold in their bank accounts, while the government struggles to provide basic public services to its population. 

Based on their diagnostic of the roots of the crisis, the researchers propose an economic recovery plan in four points: 

Adopting a new monetary and exchange rate regime based on full dollarization; given the existing de facto dollarization of the economy and the instability that a flexible exchange rate regime would bring, adopting the US dollar as Lebanon’s legal tender is the best option to jump-start the recovery.  Resolving the banking and central bank insolvency by immediately converting ~USD 76 billion in excess claims on the banks and Banque du Liban into claims on the government, while protecting deposits below ~USD 100,000-150,000.  Restructuring the public sector debt in the context of an IMF agreement that involves a gradual fiscal adjustment, achieving a 3% primary surplus by 2030 and including ~USD 8 billion in additional financing needs. This would necessitate an expected haircut of ~82-90%.  Developing new drivers of economic growth based on agricultural value chains, tourism, natural gas, and high-skill business services.  The report aims to provide decision-makers with both objective facts and original ideas to stimulate the policy debate in Lebanon and ultimately help put the country and its economy on a promising development path. 

About the Growth Lab 
The Growth Lab’s multidisciplinary team, led by Professor Ricardo Hausmann, pushes the frontiers of research on economic growth and development policy. The Growth Lab advances academic research on the nature of economic growth and conducts applied, place-based projects with governments at the national, state and city levels that aim to understand growth opportunities and how to seize them. 

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Substance abuse treatment helps reduce reported methamphetamine use among men who have sex with men

2023-11-30
A nearly decade-long study by UCLA researchers found that substance abuse treatment of any kind may help to reduce methamphetamine usage among men who have sex with other men – a population that has been disproportionately impacted by the U.S. methamphetamine crisis in recent years. The findings come from the mSTUDY, funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), and are published in the Journal of Substance Use and Addiction Treatment. The study analyzed responses from a group of nearly 300 men in Los Angeles who self-reported ...

Community scientists needed: help improve winter weather predictions

Community scientists needed: help improve winter weather predictions
2023-11-30
Community members across Utah, the Great Basin, and around Lake Erie and Lake Ontario are invited to join people across the country in contributing winter weather observations. The data is collected by scientists for a NASA-funded project that seeks to improve the accuracy of winter weather predictions.   Information collected by community scientists will help researchers from Lynker, DRI, and the University of Nevada, Reno, improve the technology that drives predictions for when precipitation will fall as rain or snow. Currently, satellite technologies struggle to differentiate snow from rain near the freezing point in mountainous ...

C-Path’s Translational Therapeutics Accelerator and Celdara Medical announce pipeline-focused MOU

2023-11-30
TUCSON, Ariz. and LEBANON, N.H., November 29, 2023 — Critical Path Institute’s (C-Path) Translational Therapeutics Accelerator (TRxA) and Celdara Medical today announced the signing of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) aimed at identifying and advancing promising new therapeutics in areas of high unmet medical need. Under the terms of this agreement, both organizations look to expand opportunities to provide financial support for the development of early-stage therapeutics by exchanging non-competitive information submitted in academic funding proposals. Launched ...

AI image generator Stable Diffusion perpetuates racial and gendered stereotypes, study finds

AI image generator Stable Diffusion perpetuates racial and gendered stereotypes, study finds
2023-11-29
What does a person look like? If you use the popular artificial intelligence image generator Stable Diffusion to conjure answers, too frequently you’ll see images of light-skinned men. Stable Diffusion’s perpetuation of this harmful stereotype is among the findings of a new University of Washington study. Researchers also found that, when prompted to create images of “a person from Oceania,” for instance, Stable Diffusion failed to equitably represent Indigenous peoples. Finally, the generator tended to sexualize images of women from certain Latin American countries (Colombia, Venezuela, Peru) as well as those from Mexico, India and Egypt. The researchers will present ...

ORNL joins consortium to tackle scientific AI’s next great milestone

ORNL joins consortium to tackle scientific AI’s next great milestone
2023-11-29
The Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory has joined a global consortium of scientists from federal laboratories, research institutes, academia and industry to address the challenges of building large-scale artificial intelligence systems and advancing trustworthy and reliable AI for scientific discovery. The partnership, known as the Trillion Parameter Consortium, or TPC, seeks to grow and improve large-scale generative AI models aimed at tackling complex scientific challenges. These include the development of scalable model architectures and related training strategies, as well as data organization ...

UT Health San Antonio launches Center for Global and Community Oral Health

2023-11-29
The School of Dentistry of The University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio has launched the Center for Global and Community Oral Health, designed to bring together various existing outreach and research programs under one umbrella to study and develop solutions to the most pressing dental challenges facing the global population. “Our vision is to transform community and global oral health through education, research and innovation,” said Brij B. Singh, PhD, associate dean of research for the dental ...

Breakthrough study shows exercise improves cognitive health for people with Down syndrome

2023-11-29
An exploratory study has shown that light, regular exercise can improve the cognitive, as well as physical, health of adults with Down syndrome. The Mindsets study, published today [29 November] in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, is the first to investigate the effects of physical and cognitive exercise on people with Down syndrome, and it found that short bursts of walking can lead to improved information processing and attention after just eight weeks. The role that exercise can play in cognitive growth represents a breakthrough in thinking about what’s ...

Long-standing hormone treatment for donated hearts found to be ineffective

Long-standing hormone treatment for donated hearts found to be ineffective
2023-11-29
Doctors managing deceased organ donors routinely treat the donors’ bodies with thyroid hormones in a bid to preserve heart function and increase the quantity and quality of hearts and other organs available for transplantation. However, according to a recent clinical trial led by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and Mid-America Transplant in St. Louis, routine thyroid hormone intervention is not effective at achieving these goals, and may even cause harm. The study is published Nov. 30 in The New England Journal of Medicine. “There have been ...

Catalysts of change: Young scientists spearhead breakthrough COVID-19 research in international collaboration

Catalysts of change: Young scientists spearhead breakthrough COVID-19 research in international collaboration
2023-11-29
A recent groundbreaking study, published in Nature Nanotechnology, sheds new light on the coronavirus's behavior, particularly its ability to remain attached under various mechanical stresses and the implications for person-to-person transmission. The paper, titled “Single-molecule force stability of the SARS-CoV-2–ACE2 interface in variants-of-concern,” is the result of a collaborative effort led by scientists from Auburn University, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, and Utrecht University. This research offers an unprecedented molecular-level understanding of the virus and raises ...

With some forms of TBI, non-deployed vets have higher risk of epilepsy than deployed

2023-11-29
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 2023 MINNEAPOLIS – A study of post-9/11 veterans shows that those with moderate or severe traumatic brain injury (TBI) who have never been deployed have a higher risk of epilepsy than those who have been deployed. The study is published in the November 29, 2023, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. “We anticipated that deployment would be linked to a higher risk of epilepsy among post-9/11 veterans with TBI given the potential higher risk for a blast or combat ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Father’s mental health can impact children for years

Scientists can tell healthy and cancerous cells apart by how they move

Male athletes need higher BMI to define overweight or obesity

How thoughts influence what the eyes see

Unlocking the genetic basis of adaptive evolution: study reveals complex chromosomal rearrangements in a stick insect

Research Spotlight: Using artificial intelligence to reveal the neural dynamics of human conversation

Could opioid laws help curb domestic violence? New USF research says yes

NPS Applied Math Professor Wei Kang named 2025 SIAM Fellow

Scientists identify agent of transformation in protein blobs that morph from liquid to solid

Throwing a ‘spanner in the works’ of our cells’ machinery could help fight cancer, fatty liver disease… and hair loss

Research identifies key enzyme target to fight deadly brain cancers

New study unveils volcanic history and clues to ancient life on Mars

Monell Center study identifies GLP-1 therapies as a possible treatment for rare genetic disorder Bardet-Biedl syndrome

Scientists probe the mystery of Titan’s missing deltas

Q&A: What makes an ‘accidental dictator’ in the workplace?

Lehigh University water scientist Arup K. SenGupta honored with ASCE Freese Award and Lecture

Study highlights gaps in firearm suicide prevention among women

People with medical debt five times more likely to not receive mental health care treatment

Hydronidone for the treatment of liver fibrosis associated with chronic hepatitis B

Rise in claim denial rates for cancer-related advanced genetic testing

Legalizing youth-friendly cannabis edibles and extracts and adolescent cannabis use

Medical debt and forgone mental health care due to cost among adults

Colder temperatures increase gastroenteritis risk in Rohingya refugee camps

Acyclovir-induced nephrotoxicity: Protective potential of N-acetylcysteine

Inhibition of cyclooxygenase-2 upregulates the nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 signaling pathway to mitigate hepatocyte ferroptosis in chronic liver injury

AERA announces winners of the 2025 Palmer O. Johnson Memorial Award

Mapping minds: The neural fingerprint of team flow dynamics

Patients support AI as radiologist backup in screening mammography

AACR: MD Anderson’s John Weinstein elected Fellow of the AACR Academy

Existing drug has potential for immune paralysis

[Press-News.org] Harvard report proposes comprehensive plan for Lebanon’s economic recovery
Researchers at the Growth Lab unveil a four-point plan to address Lebanon’s economic crisis