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The emerging liquidity crunch has helped stoke inflation, with the cost of some goods doubling over the past few months and businessmen forced to pay premiums on foreign currency to complete import deals. But with the Central Bank in Benghazi dealing with a diminishing supply of dinars, businessmen have been reluctant to deposit money. "The problem is if I deposit 100,000 (dinars) today, if I go to the bank tomorrow they'll tell me they can't give me any money because of the ... problem of liquidity," said Mustafa Mahmoud, an importer and exporter who runs a hardware store. "The next day maybe they'll give me 2,000 or 5,000 (dinars). That doesn't work for me." To help ease the burden on the fledgling government, Albagrmi says the Central Bank has limited withdrawals by individuals to 750 dinars per month, a level he said was "more then enough given the current circumstances." But the cash crunch weighs heavily on his mind, especially as "not one dollar has reached us" of the money promised by other countries. Qatar has pledged $400 million. Kuwait promised $180 million. Other friendly nations, led by France and Italy, promised a fund of at least $250 million last month. The rebels are asking for loans secured by billions of dollars in assets that were frozen under sanctions imposed on Gadhafi and the Tripoli government.
At first, legal hurdles were blamed for delays in unfreezing the Libyan funds. Weeks later, the question on the rebels' minds is if the hesitation stems from fears the money would be used to buy arms desperately needed to take on the better-equipped forces loyal to Gadhafi. Another concern may be that the rebels, despite their best efforts, remain a largely untested quotient. The rebels have offered no accounting of how they spent the money the provisional government borrowed from the Central Bank. Also unclear is how they spent the roughly $129 million they got from the one tanker of oil they were able to sell with the help of Qatar. Oil sales have since stopped because of damage to the fields from the fighting. They have also not disclosed what they have done with the millions of dollars donated by Libyans living abroad. One businessman, who declined to be identified because it was "un-Libyan" to boast about donations, said he came back from England and gave 200,000 pounds sterling ($331,000) to the rebel cause. Rebel officials have confirmed they received the cash. Despite the challenges -- or perhaps because of them -- Albagrmi said the rebels have done well, so far. Benghazi is "an economic paradise" compared to Tripoli, he says. Gasoline shortages in the capital have people lining up for days, with the gasoline costing more than three times the 15 dinars (10 U.S. cents) a liter the easterners still pay. "It's a huge achievement, what we've accomplished," Albagrmi said, referring to the financial balancing act they undertake daily.
[Associated
Press;
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