Santa closed: in Beirut, crisis snuffs out Christmas spirit

Santa closed: in Beirut, crisis snuffs out Christmas spirit
Santa closed: in Beirut, crisis snuffs out Christmas spirit

Beirut in December was once a shopping extravaganza, where day-long traffic jams clogged streets decked out with flashing Christmas lights and building-sized billboards advertising champagne and jewelry.

In barely two years of a brutal economic collapse, the lights have gone out on Beirut's commercial heyday and power shortages have left the city's streets shrouded in gloom.

This year, the roadside billboards tell a different, more frugal story: one that reflects the worst financial crisis to ever hit the once free-spending Middle Eastern country.

Steel safes, banknote counters, discounts on money transfers -- the offers plastered on the bridges straddling the main highway into Beirut aren't your typical Christmas pleasers.

"Sales of safes and vaults have increased by 35 to 50 percent since the start of the economic crisis in 2019," a sales representative at Smart Security LB, one of the main retailers in Lebanon, said.

Alarms and CCTV systems are also selling like hot cakes.

The lack of trust in banks that are widely blamed for the worst financial crisis in Lebanon's history has raised the estimated amount of cash stashed away in Lebanese homes to a whopping $10 billion.

"We're at minus 90 percent compared to pre-2019 crisis levels," said Antonio Vincenti, chairman of the Pikasso out-of-home advertising company, a market leader in Lebanon.