Syrian pound hits record low on black market, aggravating hardships

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An aerial view shows Syrians sitting amidst the damaged buildings. The collapse of the pund has raised the price of goods and increased hardships. (AFP file)
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  • The new unofficial rate means the currency is now worth almost 99 percent less on the black market than the official rate before the start of the conflict.
  • The collapse of the pound has driven up the price of goods and aggravated hardship.

Damascus–Syria’s pound hit a new low against the dollar on the black market Tuesday, according to websites monitoring the exchange rate, in the latest blow to the war-battered economy.

The exchange rate reached more than 5,000 Syrian pounds to the US dollar for the first time since the start of the conflict more than a decade ago, the websites said.

Syria’s official exchange rate has stood at around 3,015 pounds to the greenback since September — compared to 47 pounds to the dollar before the war.

The new unofficial rate means the currency is now worth almost 99 percent less on the black market than the official rate before the start of the conflict.

Syria’s economy has been battered by more than a decade of war, and is reeling from the knock-on effects of a financial crisis in neighbouring Lebanon that has stemmed the flow of dollars into government-held areas.

The collapse of the pound has driven up the price of goods and aggravated hardship.

The vast majority of Syria’s population lives below the poverty line, the United Nation says.

An estimated 12.4 million people — about 60 percent of Syria’s population -– suffer from food insecurity, according to the UN World Food Programme.

Syria’s civil war has killed nearly half a million people and forced around half of the country’s pre-war population from their homes.

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