(Bloomberg) -- Thousands of protesters cut off roads and burned debris in Beirut on Thursday, as anger over plans to impose a levy on WhatsApp calls escalated into demands for the government to resign and hold early elections.

Throngs of people converged on downtown Beirut, home to parliament and government buildings, calling on politicians currently debating a proposed austerity budget to step down.

The economic stakes have rarely been higher for Lebanon, a tiny country that straddles the geopolitical fault-lines of the Middle East, since the end of the 15-year civil war in 1990. One of the most indebted countries in the world, it is struggling to find fresh sources of funding as the foreign inflows on which it has traditionally relied have dried up.

The International Monetary Fund projects Lebanon’s current-account deficit will reach almost 30% of gross domestic product by the end of this year. It predicts that economic growth, stagnant at 0.3% in 2018, would continue to be weak amid political and economic uncertainty and a severe contraction in the real estate sector.

Sporadic demonstrations have been breaking out for months as the economic crisis has led to shortages of dollars and threatened the pensions even of retired soldiers.

Plans to impose a fee of 20 U.S. cents on the first WhatsApp call that users make every day dominated the airwaves throughout the day on Thursday, in a country where communications costs are among the least competitive in the world and people widely use internet voice applications to save money. WhatsApp, a free messaging and voice platform owned by Facebook Inc., has some 1.5 billion users worldwide.

The government is under pressure to cut spending, raise taxes and fight corruption -- conditions required by international donors to unlock some $11 billion in pledges. But the measures are proving deeply unpopular with the public. Critics say that institutional corruption, nepotism and profiteering by politicians are bankrupting the government.

As protests spread to the suburbs and provinces, Telecom Minister Mohamed Choucair called into LBC television to say Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri had ordered him to cancel the levy. But the reversal came too late to appease public opinion.

To contact the reporter on this story: Lin Noueihed in Beirut at lnoueihed@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lin Noueihed at lnoueihed@bloomberg.net, Benjamin Harvey

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