Introduction
Lebanon currently grapples with overlapping crises: an unresolved financial meltdown, drastic migration outflows, stalling post-war reconstruction, and contested sovereignty. The present feels bleak, dominated by unproductive divisions across sectarian and external alliance lines – what political scientists call vertical cleavages. In such a context, it is worth looking back to a moment when a redistributive demand to “tax rents” took center stage and foregrounded a socioeconomic horizontal cleavage cutting across sectarianized identity divisions.
This article treats the 2011-2017 battle to tax rentier incomes as a policy-process case study: it examines how ideas enter agendas, how they are maintained, and how they are reshaped. Using the advocacy coalition framework (ACF), the analysis centers on the rent-taxation policy subsystem and situates its dynamics within the broader political system and interactions with adjacent subsystems. It tracks two opposing coalitions and policy brokers as they navigated and generated political events and strategies. The narrative follows issue-coupling contests and delay and dilution tactics that shaped agenda setting and formulation. The analysis demonstrates how agenda maintenance mattered as much as entry, and how formulation was mediated by power games and brokers, with oscillating partisanships.
The studied policy battle transcended technical tinkering, directly challenging the regime’s operating model. In examining the 2011-2017 policy process, the author aspires to inform readings and actions within today’s stalemates by showcasing a map from the recent past of how horizontal claims can survive vertical divisions and yield new policy and organizational baselines.
The views represented in this paper are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Arab Reform Initiative, its staff, or its board.