DAMASCUS — Syria's central bank devalued the pound on Thursday, bringing the
currency's official exchange rate closer to the black market rate, two days
after the government sacked its governor.
اضافة اعلان
The pound was now officially valued at 2,512 to the US dollar from around
1,250 previously, central bank data showed. The black market rate is more than
3,000 to the greenback.
The move means the Syrian currency has officially shed more than 98 percent
of its value since the start of the country's civil war in 2011.
It follows the government's decision to dismiss central bank governor Hazem
Karfoul on Tuesday after a three-year tenure that coincided with a severe
economic crisis.
The pound stood at 47 pounds to the dollar before the conflict.
Syria last devalued the pound in June 2020, giving in to weeks of
depreciation on the black market as new US sanctions took effect.
The country's war-battered economy is now reeling from the knock-on effects
of a financial crisis in neighboring Lebanon that has stemmed the flow of
dollars into government-held areas.
President Bashar Al-Assad's government also blames Western sanctions against
Syria for the economic crisis.
The economic crunch has plunged millions into food insecurity nationwide, as
food has over the years become 33 times more expensive than before the war, UN
figures show.