What's new

Opinion: Iran – Dark Clouds on the Economic Horizon

Status
Not open for further replies.

BLACKEAGLE

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
May 9, 2007
Messages
10,919
Reaction score
2
Country
Jordan
Location
Jordan
Opinion: Iran – Dark Clouds on the Economic Horizon

“You haven’t been paying the teachers for months and now you have stopped paying the salaries of the military as well”. This is how Islamic Majlis member Bahram Biravand addressed President Hasan Rouhani the other day.

The subtext of the statement is that while you can send teachers to prison when they protest about not receiving their salaries, it would be hard to do the same with the military- the regime needs security forces for its protection.

Biravand is not the only one to sound the alarm about the prospects of the Iranian economy. Earlier this month, over 100 Majlis members signed a letter to Rouhani warning about “the deepest recession in Iran’s recent history” and the threat of social unrest. Before the parliamentarians joined the chorus of complaint, four cabinet ministers including the minister of economy had also written to Rouhani to inform him about the rough patch ahead. The ministers later claimed they didn’t want their letter to be leaked. However, it was obvious that at least one of them had done the leaking.

Bad news often comes in series, and this week we had the International Monetary Fund’s annual report on the Iranian economy. The IMF trashed Rouhani’s Panglossian claim that 2016 will see a 3.5 per cent economic growth rate for Iran. Instead it forecasts either a negative rate of half per cent or a positive one of the same, which would be statistically insignificant.

According to estimates by the Ministry of Labor, the Iranian job market is losing an average of 1000 jobs a day. The IMF report confirms this by forecasting a jump in unemployment rates from 11.9 this year to 12.5 in 2016.

Perhaps the only positive news that the IMF report contains concerns the price of oil which is supposed to average at $52 per barrel. However, the current price hovers around $35 with a prospect of further decline. Even then, much depends on whether or not the embargo on Iranian oil exports will be relaxed. This year Iranian exports averaged around 1.24 million barrels a day. In 2016 this might increase to 1.81 million, provided there is enough demand.

The IMF also warns against the threat of spiraling inflation , largely because of the government’s decision to do a bit of “quantitative easing” of its own, which means printing money in the same way President Barack Obama has done in the US. The problem is that the Islamic Republic is not the same as the United States. The Americans can print government bonds at virtually no interest rate and be sure that someone, usually the cash-rich Chinese, will buy them. The Islamic Republic, however, has had to shelve plans for a government bond destined for the international capital market because no major Western bank agreed to underwrite even a part of it.

Iran’s income from oil exports shows a drop of over $20 billion in 2015 from the $55.4 forecast to $35.3 billion.

In theory, Iran’s foreign currency reserves appear healthy at $142 billion according to the IMF. The problem is that because of sanctions related to the nuclear issue much of that income remains frozen in bank accounts that Tehran cannot use. A good part of those reserves were built up under President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad as a result of sanctions. Good old Mahmoud was a very rich man; only he couldn’t spend his own money.

Obama has tried to help Rouhani, whom he regards as a moderate capable of curbing the powers of the “Supreme Guide”, by allowing the release of around $8 billion of Iranian frozen assets since the Geneva talks on the nuclear issue in 2014.

However, even if all of Iran’s frozen cash is released, and there is dispute over how much is involved, the economy would continue to suffer from deep structural defects that no amount of money could correct.

When the mullahs seized power in 1979 they went on a nationalization spree inspired by their erstwhile Communist allies who regarded the Soviet Union as the ideal model of human society. Within weeks, they nationalized almost everything, destroying a capitalist and managerial elite formed over almost a century.

The result was chaos. So, under an 8-point decree issued by Ayatollah Khomeini, the chief mullah of the regime at the time, they tried to back-pedal by allowing some former owners and managers to return in exchange for fat bribes in the name of “helping the Imam fund” or other projects to “help the musatzafeen (the dispossessed)”. However, having fled to exile, many owners and managers didn’t return. That allowed the mullahs and their bazaar partners to seize whatever they could. In 1988, the government estimated the number of private businesses seized from their owners at over 75,000.

In the meantime, various religious foundations transformed themselves into businesses, each securing a niche in the market. The overall picture became more confusing when the military and security forces also joined the banquet, setting up their own companies and securing monopolies over sectors of the economy and foreign trade. For example, the largest construction conglomerate in the country belongs to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard which was headed by Rouhani for almost a decade. The Commander-in-Chief of the IRGC sits on the board of directors of 23 companies.

At one of his more aggressive moments, Ahmadinejad even claimed that the IRGC ran the black-market in Iran and paid no taxes on over 200 companies it controlled. While no one knows what is going on in the so-called “foundations”, including the biggest of them working in the area of Imam Reza in Mash’had, large segments of Iranian foreign trade are controlled by powerful mullahs. One has a monopoly on sugar imports, another on much of the trade with China.

Ahmadinejad tried to democratize corruption by privatizing state-owned businesses worth $30 billion at half the price. The result was a bonanza for influential figures within the military security networks, leaving the “average Islamic citizen” only the crumbs.
While there is no doubt that Rouhani has made many mistakes, for example increasing the military budget by 21 per cent to garner political support, it would be unfair to blame him for the mess that the Iranian economy is in. He has inherited an un-reformable system, a peculiar cocktail of socialist and anarchistic economics. The cash that Obama plans to release may save the system for a while. In the long run, however, Iran cannot build a modern economy with a system based on rentier mentality, corruption and kleptocracy.
Opinion: Iran - Dark Clouds on the Economic Horizon - ASHARQ AL-AWSAT
 
.
Too much oil and too much production. Oil price will go down another few dollars and remain rock bottom till 2017. Expected boast in 2017. American local oil companies has recently start production from closed field , closed due to collapse in oil price. So, time for oil producer to think some alternate. Saudi Royals will try to grip on Mecca and Madina , its biggest source of income. Commercializing Hajj and Umra much as possible. And Iran will emphasis more on tourism . So, oil producer need a industrial revolution and huge leap in S&T . Otherwise...............................
 
.
but it's funny though Iran is well better off long term than let's say the Sauds.

Saud Royalty has to pay off a lot of people to keep themselves in power. I think Iran problem is a lot cheaper.
 
. .
but it's funny though Iran is well better off long term than let's say the Sauds.

Saud Royalty has to pay off a lot of people to keep themselves in power. I think Iran problem is a lot cheaper.
Iranian has excellent education foundation, plus they did lot of work in their industrial growth. It not extremely modern, but spent too much money on R&D, that's the reason they are surviving .
 
.
Iranian has excellent education foundation, plus they did lot of work in their industrial growth. It not extremely modern, but spent too much money on R&D, that's the reason they are surviving .


They are suvering because of war, R&D iran ahahah. This will cost them much and much more, sponsoring war is not cheap.
 
.
They are suvering because of war, R&D iran ahahah. This will cost them much and much more, sponsoring war is not cheap.
Here discussing the local needs of engineering . From, oil well, road construction machines, airplane repair to auto mobile industry. They built all this infrastructure during sanction. Its their nationalism.
 
.
but it's funny though Iran is well better off long term than let's say the Sauds.

Saud Royalty has to pay off a lot of people to keep themselves in power. I think Iran problem is a lot cheaper.

+1

Fundamentals of Iran are quite good, say nice infrastructure, rich natural gas reserves, etc.

But more importantly it's the human capital. In terms of patent filings, Iran ranks #17 in the world, on par with Austria & Israel. In terms of patent filings per capita, Iran (174 per million population) is on par with Italy (200) and Russia (169), highest in whole MENA region. Well educated citizens, vibrant R&D activities, investors have reasons to be bullish with Iranian market in the long run. I look forward to more Iranian businesses listing in Hong Kong (we have Shanghai-HK stock connect) which can be used as a platform for deep bilateral financial coop.

WIPO Global Ranking – 2015 Edition
 
Last edited:
.
Source: Al-Sharq alo-Awsat, the Saudi regime mouthpiece that doesn't waste a second to write garbage about Iran.

And the funny thing, the thread has been started by a Jordanian. You see Jordan lives off foreign aid. Without foreign aid, the country would collapse in three months.
 
. . .
And the funny thing, the thread has been started by a Jordanian. You see Jordan lives off foreign aid. Without foreign aid, the country would collapse in three months.
The thing is, the Jordanians are happy and the Iranians are suffering.
 
.
The thing is, the Jordanians are happy and the Iranians are suffering.

Who told you that? Or as always you pulled the data out of your behind?

Iran has a higher per capita economy than Jordan: List of countries by GDP (PPP) per capita - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Iranians have a higher food energy intake: List of countries by food energy intake - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

And the Jordan is sitting on the edge of going bazook zombie: Homegrown extremism is Jordan's greatest threat - News - Stripes

An artificial country made because of a deal British made with Sherif of Mecca. A country that is entirely dependent on American hand out. A country half of whose population is refugees from Palestine and with the onslaught of refugees from Syria, soon the indigenous population would only make up a quarter of the country's population.

Demographics alone will kill this artificial country, if the economy didn't.

And do not depend on your behind for real world data.
 
.
Who told you that? Or as always you pulled the data out of your behind?

Iran has a higher per capita economy than Jordan: List of countries by GDP (PPP) per capita - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Iranians have a higher food energy intake: List of countries by food energy intake - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

And the Jordan is sitting on the edge of going bazook zombie: Homegrown extremism is Jordan's greatest threat - News - Stripes

An artificial country made because of a deal British made with Sherif of Mecca. A country that is entirely dependent on American hand out. A country half of whose population is refugees from Palestine and with the onslaught of refugees from Syria, soon the indigenous population would only make up a quarter of the country's population.

Demographics alone will kill this artificial country, if the economy didn't.

And do not depend on your behind for real world data.
lol
An artificial country who is older than your country.
higher GDP Per Capita.
higher GDP Per Capita Growth ( you are in the minus)
less Unemployment Rate.
higher Gini index.
double your Trade % of GDP.

higher Industrial Production Growth( you are in the minus)

higher manufacturing value add % of GDP.

56% less Population Below Poverty Line.

50% less homicide per 100.000 person.

you got 20% illiteracy Rate while Jordan is less than 2%.

12 times the HIV-AIDS deaths more in iran.

fucked up health state compared to Jordan.
 
.
@Horus Sir, kindly note this thread as example to my earlier remark.

Thank You
 
.
Status
Not open for further replies.

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom