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Iran's Latest Inflation Figure Tops 50 Percent - Food Prices Jump 85 Percent

Śakra

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Iran’s latest monthly inflation rate has hit 51.4 percent, according to the Iranian Statistical Center (ISC). The first month of the Iranian year (March 21-April 20) showed a more than 50 percent rise in prices compared to the same month last year.

ISC also reported that the inflation rate in the past 12 months reached 30.6 percent. This is lower than the International Monetary Fund’s estimate of inflation in Iran in 2018, at 31.2 percent. For 2019, IMF has predicted inflation at 37.2 percent.

Iranian institutions usually underreport inflation and unemployment rates, but ISC’s figures are sometimes closer to reality than statistics offered by other institutions.

Worsening economic conditions, specially inflation and unemployment led to mass protests across Iran in late 2017, early 2018. The government suppressed the revolt by arresting thousands of protesters.

World Bank And IMF More Pessimistic About Iran’s Economy
What is more alarming for ordinary Iranians in ISC figures is the rise in prices for food, drinks and tobacco. In the latest Iranian month, prices for these three daily consumer items have jumped 85.3 percent compared to a year ago.

The Iranian currency rial began a steep fall one year ago, as the markets felt uneasy about the possibility of the United States pulling out of the 2015 nuclear agreement and reimposing sanctions. When in May 2018 President Donald Trump announced the U.S. withdrawal from the deal, the Iranian currency devalued faster, losing its exchange rate almost fourfold against the USD and other major currencies.

At the beginning of 2018 one US dollar bought around 40,000 rials, while now it fetches more than 140,000 on the non-governmental or free currency market.

The fall of the currency, which stems from the inherent weaknesses of the Iranian economy and accelerated by U.S. sanctions led to an ever higher rate of inflation in the country.

The annual rate of inflation for food, drinks and tobacco was 45 percent and other items 25 percent according to ISC’s estimates.

The annual rate is usually calculated by comparing a given period of 12 months with the averages of the previous 12-month period.

These latest figures also show that inflation was much higher in rural areas, standing at 59.4 percent, compared with urban areas at 50 percent.

Vegetables had the highest monthly price increases at 155.6 percent followed by meat at 117 percent in March 21-April 20, 2019 compared to the same month in 2018.

Tomato Prices Double Overnight In Iran As Ban On Exports Lifted
Both vegetables and meat are being exported to neighboring countries, as the falling Iranian currency opens up a huge gap in domestic and foreign prices. For wholesale dealers it is much more profitable to export these items than sell them at domestic markets.

Recently, the Iranian government has announced bans on exporting various food items, including onions in late March, when one kilogram of the important food staple reached $1.25. While this might not seem too high compared with other countries, for a minimum wage earner in Iran it can be a prohibitively high price. The minimum wage is around $110 monthly for many Iranian workers.

https://en.radiofarda.com/a/iran-s-...t---food-prices-jump-85-percent/29895099.html

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Stay strong! Don’t give in to the orange monster.
 
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The extremist terrorist mullah regime deserves nothing more than a war
 
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Cant they import agri products from us? Pakistan throws half of it away, anyways.
 
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Cant they import agri products from us? Pakistan throws half of it away, anyways.
I have heard about Iranians inquiring about beef and lamb imports from Pakistan. The countries they use to buy from are no longer exporting to them.
 
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The extremist terrorist regime deserves nothing more than a war
Iran’s latest monthly inflation rate has hit 51.4 percent, according to the Iranian Statistical Center (ISC). The first month of the Iranian year (March 21-April 20) showed a more than 50 percent rise in prices compared to the same month last year.

ISC also reported that the inflation rate in the past 12 months reached 30.6 percent. This is lower than the International Monetary Fund’s estimate of inflation in Iran in 2018, at 31.2 percent. For 2019, IMF has predicted inflation at 37.2 percent.

Iranian institutions usually underreport inflation and unemployment rates, but ISC’s figures are sometimes closer to reality than statistics offered by other institutions.

Worsening economic conditions, specially inflation and unemployment led to mass protests across Iran in late 2017, early 2018. The government suppressed the revolt by arresting thousands of protesters.

World Bank And IMF More Pessimistic About Iran’s Economy
What is more alarming for ordinary Iranians in ISC figures is the rise in prices for food, drinks and tobacco. In the latest Iranian month, prices for these three daily consumer items have jumped 85.3 percent compared to a year ago.

The Iranian currency rial began a steep fall one year ago, as the markets felt uneasy about the possibility of the United States pulling out of the 2015 nuclear agreement and reimposing sanctions. When in May 2018 President Donald Trump announced the U.S. withdrawal from the deal, the Iranian currency devalued faster, losing its exchange rate almost fourfold against the USD and other major currencies.

At the beginning of 2018 one US dollar bought around 40,000 rials, while now it fetches more than 140,000 on the non-governmental or free currency market.

The fall of the currency, which stems from the inherent weaknesses of the Iranian economy and accelerated by U.S. sanctions led to an ever higher rate of inflation in the country.

The annual rate of inflation for food, drinks and tobacco was 45 percent and other items 25 percent according to ISC’s estimates.

The annual rate is usually calculated by comparing a given period of 12 months with the averages of the previous 12-month period.

These latest figures also show that inflation was much higher in rural areas, standing at 59.4 percent, compared with urban areas at 50 percent.

Vegetables had the highest monthly price increases at 155.6 percent followed by meat at 117 percent in March 21-April 20, 2019 compared to the same month in 2018.

Tomato Prices Double Overnight In Iran As Ban On Exports Lifted
Both vegetables and meat are being exported to neighboring countries, as the falling Iranian currency opens up a huge gap in domestic and foreign prices. For wholesale dealers it is much more profitable to export these items than sell them at domestic markets.

Recently, the Iranian government has announced bans on exporting various food items, including onions in late March, when one kilogram of the important food staple reached $1.25. While this might not seem too high compared with other countries, for a minimum wage earner in Iran it can be a prohibitively high price. The minimum wage is around $110 monthly for many Iranian workers.

https://en.radiofarda.com/a/iran-s-...t---food-prices-jump-85-percent/29895099.html

————————————————————————

Stay strong! Don’t give in to the orange monster.

They deserve nothing less for trusting the U.S!
 
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The extremist terrorist regime deserves nothing more than a war
enough with warmongering, millions of innocents have been killed and trillions of dollars wasted on wars, imo we could have achieved disease-free world even if few percent of that amount was spent on research. Just look at the past 40 years and you can clearly see which country/countries have terrorist regimes.
 
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I have heard about Iranians inquiring about beef and lamb imports from Pakistan. The countries they use to buy from are no longer exporting to them.
iran import 80 percent rice though uae and other gcc countries and only 20 percent goes directly. in other word some gcc countries takes away the lion share of pakistani exporters. due these sanction others making money. pak rice goes to uae and qatar from there it goes to iran.
 
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The end of pakistan will come before Iran even sneezes.

:lol::lol::lol:

Pakistan is not ending. We are too strong. Weak and irrelevant state like india will disintegrate 1000 years before Pakistan even comes slightly close to “ending”

Don’t worry.

On topic: Current Iranian govt is facing unique set of challenges. I’d be surprised if this Iranian govt set up lasts till 2030.
 
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Cant they import agri products from us? Pakistan throws half of it away, anyways.
Iran is an exporter itself.

The problem is that current traitor Reformist government is filled with pro-west morons who want to implement the free trade sh!t and liberalism, so they have turned Iran into big import market, you just have to look at the list of their import list from U.S itself to know what I say (they can't live without U.S made furniture and aftabe!!!), and to provide the dollar for this enormous import rate, they have started exporting what they have, food of Iranian! unbelievable, but sheer reality, so of course farmers prefer to sell their products to exporters who can pay more.
 
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Traitor reformist government which is not reformist at all and it was not much better at the time of previous government.
Liar.
This president was the sole Reformists' candidate, and Reformists (whether in Parliament or in their media) are supporting all of its actions.
but, yeah, when it time to answer for the result, it's not reformist!

Prices in previous government was one third; our nuclear, missile and space scientists had their jobs (weren't fired), and sanctions were the same as today.
 
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Liar.
This president was the sole Reformists' candidate, and Reformists (whether in Parliament or in their media) are supporting all of its actions.
but, yeah, when it time to answer for the result, it's not reformist!

Prices in previous government was one third; our nuclear, missile and space scientists had their jobs (weren't fired), and sanctions were the same as today.
There was no reformist candidate , president was a person who was member of all conservative organizations you can think of .
But he participated as moderate and the reformists decided to choose between bad and worse (as for reasons better not to mentioned) they had no candidate of their own.
And the prices at the time of khatami was 1/3rd of the time of Ahmadinejad and let me tell you a secret the prices at the time of Rafsanjani were a lot less than the time of khatami so I wonder what you meant by your price comment.
 
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