A year on, Iran’s Raisi faces economy in trouble

A year on, Iran’s Raisi faces economy in trouble
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei (R) hands over documents during Ebrahim Raisi's inauguration as president of Iran on August 3, 2021 in Tehran. (AFP)
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Updated 02 August 2022
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A year on, Iran’s Raisi faces economy in trouble

A year on, Iran’s Raisi faces economy in trouble
  • Raisi was elected in June last year with less than half of voters turning up after his major rivals had been disqualified by electoral bodies
  • His record is more mixed as Iran remains hit by biting sanctions that keep it isolated from global financial systems.

TEHRAN: A year after Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi took power, his government has curbed the Covid pandemic but faces a sharp downturn of the sanctions-hit economy as nuclear talks remain stalled.
Having pledged to help especially the poor, the ultraconservative cleric now faces runaway consumer prices that have sparked protests.
Raisi was elected in June last year in a ballot for which less than half of voters turned up, after his major rivals had been disqualified by electoral bodies.
He was inaugurated on August 3 by the supreme leader, Ali Khamenei, and sworn in two days later as head of government in the Islamic republic.
When he formed his cabinet, Raisi named his two top priorities: controlling the region’s worst Covid outbreak, and turning around the battered economy.
Iran’s vaccination campaign, long hampered by US sanctions, was massively stepped up using Chinese and Russian drugs.
For Hamidreza Taraqi, a top official in the Islamic Coalition Party, part of the conservative alliance backing the Raisi, the government has “succeeded in curbing the coronavirus and in eliminating its effects.”
The UN World Health Organization says more than 58 million Iranians, or some 70 percent of the population, have now been fully vaccinated.
“Raisi’s government did oversee widespread coronavirus vaccinations after the state reversed course and approved foreign vaccine imports,” said Henry Rome of the US-based consultancy Eurasia Group.
But on the economic front, Raisi’s record is more mixed as Iran remains hit by biting sanctions that keep it isolated from global financial systems.

Iran had hoped for greater prosperity after its 2015 landmark nuclear deal with major powers gave it sanctions relief in exchange for curbs on its atomic program.
But former US president Donald Trump in 2018 unilaterally withdrew Washington from the agreement and reimposed a punishing sanctions regime.
The economic pain has deepened popular distrust in Iran toward the government, both under the previous president, the moderate Hassan Rouhani, and under Raisi.
The darker mood, say analysts, was reflected in the record abstention rate at last year’s election, which came after the repression of protest movements, especially from December 2017 and again in November 2019.
Iran had returned to economic growth under Rouhani after the 2018-2019 recession.
But, hit by Trump’s sanctions which dramatically curbed crucial oil exports, Iran’s GDP per capita is now not expected to recover to its pre-crisis level until next year, according to the International Monetary Fund.

In April 2021, with President Joe Biden in the White House, talks on rescuing the nuclear accord began in Vienna.
The negotiations resumed in November 2021 after a pause around Iran’s presidential polls but have yet to produce a breakthrough, while the Raisi government faces a budget deficit that economists consider abysmal.
Inflation, which has been eroding household purchasing power for years, in June reached 54 percent from a year earlier, according to the latest official data.
And the rial currency, which had recovered somewhat early this year on hopes of a deal in the nuclear talks, has since resumed its rapid descent, and reached a new low in June against the dollar.
Then in May, the government started to lift state subsidies on flour and to raise prices on food staples such as oil and dairy products — measures that especially penalized the poor whom Raisi had championed.
“The country’s economic horizon is far from clear... and economists predict we will face more rising prices,” Mehdi Rahmanian, editor of the reformist newspaper Shargh, told AFP.
The rising cost of living has driven protests in several Iranian cities in recent months.
Much now depends on how the nuclear talks go, said Rome.
“If the nuclear negotiations collapse, as appears likely,” he said, “Iran will likely face more significant economic and social turmoil.”