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Can anyone here verify or discredit any of these claims??? (which I believe originally came from an arabic article).
I've seen these before and they were responded to individually by an actual Libyan. I can't find the picture (it was screencapped), but I'll try to give you what I can remember from that source and others.
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In Libya
1. Electricity for every household is free.
Mostly true. According to the Libyan guy, everyone got a bill, but any unpaid bills were eventually paid for by the government. Essentially, Libyan electricity bills were soliciting donations to keep the system running.
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5. After entry into marriage state pays first apartment or house (150m2).
There was a specific figure on this which, without knowing anything about exchange rates, did sound pretty good. At any rate, the government asked the recipients of this subsidy to repay half of it eventually, but there was no punishment for not doing so. Kind of like with the electricity bill.
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6. Buying cars at factory prices.
False. According to the Libyan, there was an automaker based in Libya at one time. If people bought a car from this company, the government would pay 50% of the cost of the car, kind of as a reward for patronizing a local business. The company itself either went out of business or fell out of fashion, and few people own their cars any more.
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7. Do not owe anyone a cent.
True. I believe the figure was 4 years after Gaddafi came to power, Libya was out of debt. Before the fall of the Jamahiriya, Wikipedia reported otherwise. I'm not sure what the source was on that or how accurate it was, though.
I
think that domestic healthcare was free. I do know that if Libyans required treatment from a specialist abroad, they got shipped out to whatever country they needed to go to for care and the government footed the bill.
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9. Free higher education abroad.
This was restricted to Master's and PhD programs; beneath that had to be done in Libya.
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10. 40 loaves of bread costs $0.15.
11. 8 dinars per liter of oil (0.08 EUR).
Probably true, given exchange rates and oil availability. Gas is MUCH cheaper in the Middle East than it is here; Saudi Arabia, last I heard, still had gas for under a dollar per gallon.
What is this trying to say.
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13. For each infant, the couple receives $5,000 for it's needs.
This apparently was an older program that has since been discontinued, largely due to Libya being overpopulated in terms of its available water and farmland. I suppose the government didn't want to subsidize its way into food scarcity.
They did have a central bank, but it was ultimately responsible only to the government of Libya, and wasn't owned by the same people that allegedly own other countries' central banks.