Speaking in a televised press conference after a cabinet meeting, the premier said the measures were not merely an attempt to quell demonstrations.
"These decisions are not designed as a trade-off. They are not to ask you to stop expressing your anger. That is your decision to make," he said.
"Your movement is what led to these decisions that you see today," he added.
الإجراءات المنتظرة في #الموازنة ومن خارجها سارت اليوم ومن أهمها أن تكون الموازنة بعجز 0.6 بالمئة ومن دون أي ضرائب ومصرف #لبنان والمصارف تساهم بخفض العجز#مجلس_الوزراء #سعد_الحريري
— Saad Hariri (@saadhariri) October 21, 2019
The protests which started five days ago over tax hikes have evolved into an unprecedented push to remove Lebanon's entire political leadership.
Hariri said that he supported the demonstrators' call for early elections.
"We have heard you. If your demand is early parliamentary elections, it is your voice only that decides. I, Saad Hariri, am with you in this demand."
Last year, Lebanon held its first parliamentary polls in nine years after the deeply divided legislature repeatedly extended its own term.
But the May 2018 vote failed to shake up the multi-confessional country's entrenched ruling class.
It saw veteran parliamentary speaker Nabih Berri elected to a sixth consecutive term.
The president renamed Hariri as premier, but he then struggled for more than eight months to form a coalition government.
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