What happened: A group of countries — including United States of America, United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Türkiye, United Arab Emirates and Egypt — welcomed the April 11 signing of Libya’s first unified national budget in more than 10 years.
The big picture: The deal is a key step toward economic coordination between Libya’s divided leadership.
- It could help foster greater unity, stability, and long-term growth.
Between the lines: This isn’t just bookkeeping. The unified budget aims to stabilize public finances and defend the Libyan dinar.
- It seeks to protect citizens’ purchasing power.
- It opens the door to development projects and international investment.
Energy angle: The plan includes the first operational budget in years for the National Oil Corporation.
- It allocates funding to boost oil and gas production.
- Higher output could support both Libya’s economy and global energy supply.
Oversight & institutions. The budget includes accountability mechanisms to ensure funds are used effectively and strengthens key technocratic institutions, including the central bank and audit bodies.
What they’re saying: International partners reaffirmed support for the UN-led process, including efforts by Special Representative Hanna Tetteh to advance:
- a Libyan-led political process,
- unified governance,
- and national elections.
The bottom line: Deeper economic integration could reinforce political progress — and a stable, unified Libya is in everyone’s interest.



