DAMASCUS: Syria’s new leaders are endeavor a radical overhaul of the nation’s damaged financial system, together with plans to fireside a 3rd of all public sector staff and privatising state-run corporations dominant throughout half a century of Assad household rule.
The tempo of the declared crackdown on waste and corruption, which has already seen the primary layoffs simply weeks after rebels toppled Assad on Dec 8, has triggered protests from authorities staff, together with over fears of a sectarian jobs purge.
Reuters interviewed 5 ministers within the interim authorities fashioned by former insurgent group the Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS). All described the vast scope of plans to shrink the state, together with eradicating quite a few “ghost staff” – individuals who bought paid for doing little or nothing throughout Assad’s rule.
Beneath Assad and his father, Syria was organised as a militarised, state-led financial system that favoured an inside circle of allies and relations, with family members’s Alawite sect closely represented within the public sector.
There’s now a serious shift to “a aggressive free-market financial system,” Syria’s new financial system minister, 40-year-old former power engineer Basil Abdel Hanan, advised Reuters.
Beneath transitional president Ahmed al-Sharaa, the federal government will work on privatising state-run industrial corporations, which Hanan stated totalled 107 and had been largely loss making. Nevertheless, he vowed to maintain “strategic” power and transport property in public fingers. He didn’t present names of corporations to be offered off. Syria’s foremost industries embody oil, cement and metal.
Some state corporations appeared to exist solely to embezzle sources and can be closed, Finance Minister Mohammad Abazeed stated in an interview.
“We anticipated corruption, however to not this extent,” Abazeed stated.
Solely 900,000 of 1.3 million folks on the federal government payroll truly come to work, Abazeed stated, citing a preliminary assessment.
“This implies there are 400,000 ghost names,” Abazeed, an lively 38-year-old, stated in his workplace. “Eradicating these will save important sources.”
Mohammad Alskaf, the minister for Administrative Growth who oversees public sector headcount, went additional, telling Reuters the state would wish between 550,000 and 600,000 staff – lower than half the present quantity.
The purpose of the reforms, which additionally goal to simplify the tax system with an amnesty on penalties, was to take away obstacles and encourage traders to return to Syria, Abazeed stated.
“In order that their factories throughout the nation can function a launchpad” for international exports, stated Abazeed, beforehand an economist on the Al-Shamal personal college earlier than serving as a treasury official within the insurgent stronghold of Idlib in 2023.
IDLIB MODEL
Till sweeping into Damascus within the lightening offensive that ousted Assad, HTS had dominated Idlib as an opposition breakaway province since 2017, attracting funding and the personal sector with much less crimson tape and by clamping down on hard-line spiritual factions.
The brand new authorities hopes for a nationwide enhance in international and home funding to generate new jobs as Syria rebuilds from 14 years of battle, three ministers advised Reuters.
Nevertheless, to duplicate the Idlib mannequin, HTS should overcome widespread challenges, not least worldwide sanctions that severely impinge on international commerce.
Maha Katta, a Senior Resilience and Disaster Response Specialist for Arab States on the Worldwide Labour Group, stated the financial system was at the moment in no situation to create sufficient personal jobs.
Restructuring the general public sector “is sensible,” Katta stated, however she questioned whether or not it ought to be a high precedence for a authorities that wants first to revive the financial system.
“I am undecided if that is actually a sensible choice,” she stated.