Iran Mired in Economic Pain as Presidential Vote Nears
Iran Mired in Economic Pain as
Presidential Vote Nears
When Iranians vote for a new
president next week, they will do so in the depths of an economic crisis
brought on by crippling sanctions and worsened by the pandemic.
After years of international
isolation, Iran's 83 million people are suffering as jobs are scarce, prices
are rising and hopes for a brighter future are dwindling for many.
"We don't make any plans, we just live from day
to day," said Mahnaz, a 30-year-old saleswoman in a Tehran beauty products
shop, summing up the glum mood, AFP reported.
Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei acknowledged last month that "the main (problems) of the
people" are youth unemployment and "the difficulties... of the
underprivileged class".
An ultraconservative candidate,
judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi, is seen likely to win the June 18 election, in
another setback for the moderate and reformist camps that have long hoped for
greater re-engagement with the world.
"We are facing the most serious macroeconomic
crisis Iran has experienced since the 1979 revolution," said Thierry
Coville of the Institute for International and Strategic Relations in Paris.
Iran is mired in a "deep
social crisis" and "the collapse of the purchasing power" of a
large part of the population, he said, estimating that unemployment has "exploded"
to 20 percent of the workforce.
The rial currency has collapsed,
and prices have soared amid inflation which the IMF projects at 39 percent for
this year.
Families are struggling to make
ends meet, and on Tehran's streets all the talk is about sky-rocketing prices,
especially for meat, eggs and milk.
In his shop selling scarves in
Tehran's big bazaar, Fakhreddine, 80, said things are so bad now that he almost
misses the era of the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq war, because back then at least
"we had work".
The dire situation stands in sharp
contrast to high expectations after the Islamic republic struck its 2015
nuclear deal with world powers that promised the lifting of some international
sanctions in return for limits on Tehran's nuclear program.
There were high hopes for an
influx of foreign investment after Iran's pledge not to build or acquire
nuclear weapons -- a goal it has always denied pursuing.
But those hopes were dashed in
2018 when then-president Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the deal
and launched or reimposed crippling sanctions as part of a sweeping
"maximum pressure" campaign.
Foreign companies bolted, fearful
of US sanctions, as Iran lost billions in crucial oil revenues and was locked
out of the international financial system.
Iran was thrown into a deep
recession and saw repeated bouts of street protests, as well as a backlash
against the moderates and reformists around President Hassan Rouhani who had
negotiated the deal.
The International Monetary Fund
says Iran's GDP fell by more than six percent in both 2018 and 2019 and only
returned to modest growth last year.
When the Covid-19 pandemic struck,
Iran quickly became the region's worst-hit country. According to official
figures, widely believed to underestimate the real toll, some three million
people have been infected, of whom more than 81,000 have died.
Iran has been worn down by a
decade of on-and-off sanctions, say analysts.
"Since 2011, about eight million individuals
have descended from the middle class into the lower middle class strata, while
the ranks of the poor (have) swelled by more than four million," wrote
economist Djavad Salehi-Isfahani in a recent study published by Johns Hopkins
University.
"The problem was compounded by the arrival of
the Covid pandemic in 2020. In addition to lacking resources to assist those
who lost their jobs, the government has not been able to easily reach the
majority of Iranian workers who hold informal jobs."
The crisis has also sharply
reduced infrastructure investment by the government, said Coville, who added
that "it is no coincidence that we are starting to see power cuts in
Iran," referring to recent blackouts.
Iran's conservative camp has long
blamed the reformists for having naively trusted the West in agreeing the
nuclear deal -- but Rouhani on Wednesday defended the landmark achievement of
his eight years in office.
"It was the nuclear deal that put the country on
the path to (economic) development, and today the solution to the country's
problem is for everyone to go back to the deal," he said.
"We don't know any other way."
All seven presidential candidates
-- including the five ultraconservatives who have repeatedly criticized the
deal -- now agree that Iran's top priority is to get the United States to lift
the sanctions.