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Iranian Economists Call For Deep Changes, Warn of Chaos

Iran International Newsroom
Jun 11, 2022, 20:52 GMT+1Updated: 17:30 GMT+1
Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei mourning in a mourning ceremony in January 2021
Iran's Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei mourning in a mourning ceremony in January 2021

More than 60 Iranian economists have issued a statement addressing the government saying that the main cause of Iran’s economic crisis is bad governance.

The signatories, mostly professors of economics in Iranian universities and many who have held government posts, suggest the government’s “economic surgery” since March has led to “social chaos and worsening economic instability.”

With the new Iran year beginning March 22, President Ebrahim Raisi with the backing of parliament began a plan to phase out state subsidies on food imports that had been costing $9-15 billion a year.

While in part a response to global food inflation sparked partly by the invasion of Ukraine, the move, quickly dubbed “economic surgery,” was officially portrayed as a serious reform of Iran’s state-dominated economy.

‘Quick measure in face of global price crisis’

The economists charged in their statement that the motivation was purely fiscal, easing a shortfall in the government budget, and that real reform required more serious change: “[The move was] a temporary and quick measure for addressing the budget deficit amid sanctions and a global food price crisis. We cannot consider this an economic reform.”

The economists argued that this “economic surgery” would lead to a further fall in the value of the Iranian rial and lead to “repeated economic shocks,” and said the government had not engaged with the public about where the policy would lead.

The economists noted Raisi’s election campaign promises to form an inclusive government, utilize experts to draft economic plans, slash “the 50-percent inflation rate,” and build one million housing units each year.

Raisi's presidential campaign poster in May 2021
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Raisi's presidential campaign poster in May 2021

But the economists argued it would not be possible to fulfil such promises without an early agreement in talks with world powers to revive the 2015 nuclear deal and accession to international transparency and related regulations demanded by the Paris-based inter-state Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which blacklisted Iran in 2020.

Despite various restrictions on non-governmental media, many experts and business figures had warned over “the horrible” results of “inaction” in foreign policy and ill-designed policies, the economists said. Economic shocks and the pausing of nuclear talks in March had fed instability, social chaos, and widespread concern among the people over their livelihoods, creating an “explosive” situation.

They went on to warn that “the country’s situation is extremely fragile,” given the elimination of food subsidies. “People’s patience will run out and will place the government and the regime face-to-face with the people.”

Three recommendations

The signatories made three recommendations.

First, the state should have sufficient oil and non-oil export revenues and foreign currency reserves to ensure secure handling of economic fluctuations.

Second, the government should have clear and effective policies to foster macro-economic stability, with control over inflationary budgets.

Third, the government should ensure low-cost access to global markets for goods and services.

The last recommendation is related to extra costs Iranian government and businesses have to bear to do international transaction, given US sanctions and FATF’s blacklisting.

Low growth

The economists warned that Iran had lost ground economically compared with most other countries since 1980, with average growth of 1.6 precent, whereas growth in China, India, Turkey, Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates, and Pakistan had ranged from 4 to 10 percent.

The economists spoke of vanishing hopes, growing poverty and a widening income gap that have led to vengefulness in society. The resulting disorder exhibited itself in destruction of the environment, systematic corruption, widespread emigration, capital flight and brain drain.

The 61 signatories called for “fundamental change in foreign policy” aimed at peaceful coexistence, cooperation with neighbors, and interaction with the world’s economic powers. They also urged improvement in governance, with respect for law, minimizing corruption, establishing an independent judiciary, dialogue and transparency, and allowing “true economic competition” in society.

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Court Dismissed Lawsuit Against Iran Hijab Policeman Who Shot A Man

Jun 11, 2022, 20:09 GMT+1

A court in Iran has dismissed a lawsuit by an Iranian boxer who was shot by a morality police officer while he was promenading in a park with his wife and 11-month daughter. 

Reza Moradkhani said in an interview with Shargh daily published Saturday that they were walking in the Pardisan park in Tehran late in May when a 22-year-old morality police officer confronted his wife, Maria Arefi, and following verbal confrontation with the agents they pepper sprayed Moradkhani and Arefi and even their toddler. 

Moradkhani then charged for one of the agents who had insulted his wife and the agent fired 10 shots at him, four of which hit the Iranian national team boxer, resulting in his hospitalization. 

The Moradkhanis said that they had filed a complaint at the military court but that the court ruled against them and charged them with removing hijab and attacking a police officer.

The incident has gone viral on Iranian social media, with people condemning hijab policing and police impunity.

The paper quoted a witness as saying that the police officer who fired at Moradkhani forced bystanders who were recording the incident to erase their phones.

Moradkhani, who has been a boxer for the Iranian national team for many years and has won several Asian and world medals, is now unable to continue coaching due to the injuries in the incident.

Iran's Currency Hits All-Time Low Against US Dollar Amid Nuclear Deadlock

Jun 11, 2022, 11:22 GMT+1

Iran’s hard-hit currency dropped to an all-time low against the US dollar on Saturday as markets opened for business amid runaway inflation and economic chaos.

The rial approached 330,000 to one US dollar, falling by more than 25 percent since the end of March and tenfold since 2017, when it traded at around 33,000.

The drop came as Iran was censured by a resolution passed in an overwhelming vote at the International Atomic Energy Agency board meeting on Wednesday. The 35-nation board of governors criticized Tehran for not cooperating with the UN nuclear watchdog.

Iran’s nuclear talks with the United States and its European allies to restore the 2015 agreement known as JCPOA came to a halt in early March, prompting pessimism over the prospects of lifting US sanctions and providing a lifeline to Iran’s economy.

Food prices have soared since early May when the government lifted import subsidies for essential goods to save foreign currency. Economists in Tehran have warned of triple-digit inflation in the coming months.

Anti-government Protests took place in May as prices soared and the political environment remains highly volatile.

US oil export and banking sanctions imposed against Iran in 2018 by the former US administration triggered a serious economic crisis that has gotten worse amid government inefficiency.

The rial was trading at 70 against the US dollar in 1978, before the Islamic revolution. The currency has fallen close to 5,000-fold in 44 years.

Conservative Paper Calls For Axing Iran’s Islamic Propaganda Outfit

Jun 11, 2022, 10:38 GMT+1
•
Iran International Newsroom

A conservative newspaper in Iran has called on President Ebrahim Raisi to shut down the Islamic Propagation Organization and spend the budget on pressing needs.

In an editorial authored by the daily's outspoken managing editor Masih Mohajeri on June 9, Jomhouri Eslami [Islamic Republic] writing about the Iranian government's economic problems said, "A government that holds up payments to pensioners as a bid to solve its economic problems should prioritize its expenditures and get rid of unnecessary organizations."

The daily asked: "Some of Iran's cultural organizations do nothing other than duplicating the efforts of other government institutions. For instance, what kind of service is the Islamic Propagation Organization rendering that justifies its survival?" The newspaper maintained: "The high-maintenance organization should have attained its initial goals during the past 40 years [of an Islamic government]. If it hasn't, it means that it has not been successful."

The Islamic Propagation Organization is a body that operates in parallel with Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance and one of its objectives is offering guidelines to Friday Prayer Imams in cities and towns nationwide.

Over the past four decades, the organization's main function has been justifying the government's policies and trumpeting the ideas of fundamentalists in Iran such as the Friday Prayer Imams in Isfahan and Mashhad. The two clerics are often criticized by the people for undermining human rights and advocating violence against women and those who follow a lifestyle different from the preferences of the fundamentalists.

Masih Mohajeri, the conservative editor who called for abolishing Islamic proaganda outfits. FILE
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Masih Mohajeri, the conservative editor who called for abolishing Islamic proaganda outfits

Last week, a young man in Isfahan attacked Yousef Tabatabainejad, the Imam in Isfahan who had opined that people can attack "bad-hijab" women at their own discretion. In their sermons on Friday June 10, several imams made outlandish statements. Ignoring Iran's economic problems, Rasoul Abdollahi who led the prayers in Tabriz said that Raisi's economic policy is being followed in Russia as an economic model for resistance.

Meanwhile, Mohamad Nabi Mousavi Fard in Ahwaz called for shaming those who undermine “Islamic values in the streets” as a lesson for others, while Ahmad Khatami in Tehran and many others in other cities repeated the official jargon about a resolution passed this week at the UN nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, criticizing Iran's non-cooperative behavior and praised the government for undermining IAEA safeguards.

In another article on Thursday, the Jomhouri Eslami wrote that the government has increased the Islamic Propagation Organization's budget by 156 per cent in for the current year. The article charged that the government of President Ebrahim Raisi has started what he called an "economic surgery" by targeting the poorest Iranians while giving more funds to government bodies such as the Islamic Propagation Organization.

Last year the organization received around $40 million based on the average exchange rate in 2021, there fore this year the appropriation is more than $100 million. Although this might not seem like a large sum by Western standards, in Iran an average person has a salary of $150 per month.

Overall, the government spends close to $800 million on propaganda outfits, not counting the state television with close to 40,000 employees and a $200 million budget plus advertising income.

The article went on to say that such organizations have been a burden on the country's annual budget and national financial resources for years without being able to contribute to productive efforts or the nation's welfare. The daily argued that economic pressures should be distributed fairly among various parts of the government and groups of the population.

Friday Prayers Leaders Back Iran’s Removal Of IAEA Cameras

Jun 11, 2022, 00:52 GMT+1

Friday Prayer leaders in Iran have backed the government’s decision to reduce access to the UN nuclear watchdog, IAEA, in the wake of a critical resolution adopted against Tehran.

The Friday Imams described removing the monitoring equipment installed by the International Atomic Energy Agency as the first step in reducing relations with the agency, with Tehran's Friday prayer Imam Ahmad Khatami condemning the IAEA resolution against Iran and saying that “the revolutionaries hit the bully in the mouth."

Referring to the IAEA director general Rafael Mariano Grossi's visit to Israel, the hardliner cleric called on the authorities "not to provide complete information to the IAEA." 

Similar remarks against the resolution and IAEA’s monitoring of Iranian facilities were made during the Friday prayer sermons in several other cities, including Esfahan, Arak, Bushehr, Ilam, and Ahvaz. 

Iran told the IAEA it plans to remove more monitoring equipment after the 35-member IAEA board Wednesday passed the resolution. Tehran says it intends to maintain a basic level of monitoring and inspectors’ access as required under the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT).

The contents of Friday Prayer sermons delivered by Khamenei's local representatives in various cities are dictated by two state bodies close to Khamenei's office, officially known as "The Policy-making Council for Friday Prayer Imams" and the "Friday Prayer Headquarters," both dominated by hardliner clerics.

Iranian Police Adds $10 Million Worth Of Equipment For Riot Control

Jun 10, 2022, 17:07 GMT+1

Amid a growing wave of protests across Iran, the country’s police have added about $10 million worth of anti-riot equipment to law enforcement forces, including special armored vehicles.

The deputy commander of the Iranian police, Brigadier-General Ghasem Rezaei, made the announcement during a ceremony where some of the equipment was handed over to special units, including 527 vehicles and motorcycles.

Rezaei said that the new equipment and vehicles will help the operational units better execute their missions and is aimed at "strengthening the security of the country." 

In addition to enhancing operational mobility, some of the new equipment provides police forces with “self-protection” during missions, he added. 

Iran has tens of thousands of special police and security units that are often deployed to break up antigovernmental protests that have become more frequent since 2017.

In November 2019, when a sudden government price increase for fuel was announced and nationwide demonstrations began, these security forces were ordered to shoot unarmed protesters, killing at least 1,500 people in a matter of a few days.

Last year, special forces were used in two provinces to quell protests during which more than ten people were killed and hundreds wounded.