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Abolishing subsidies to aggravate inflation in Iran

13 April 2011 [13:57] - TODAY.AZ
Despite the Iranian government’s attempts, the decision to get rid of subsidies will significantly impact inflation in the near future, Professor at Northeastern University Kamran Dadkhah said.

"An aggravating factor will be the removal of subsidies in the coming months," he wrote Trend in an e-mail. "The government has taken many steps to minimize or delay the effect of removing indirect subsidies on prices. Nevertheless, the removal of the subsidies will have an effect over the next year and accelerate the inflation rate."

The Iranian Central Bank announced this week that the inflation rate for the Iranian calendar year hit 12.4%.

In January, Iranian Central Bank head Mahmoud Bahmani announced plans to reduce inflation to 4%.

The cause of inflation in Iran, and indeed anywhere in the world, is the growth of liquidity, the expert said.

"The Bank Markazi data for the past years and early 1389 (2010) show that liquidity has been increasing at rates exceeding 20 percent," Dadkhah said. "Given the very slow growth (or perhaps decline) of the Iranian economy during 1389 (2010), it is not surprising that inflation is double digit and accelerating."

Now, inflation is the main economic problem in Iran and caused the Iranian rial a to drop significantly in value over the past few years.

Some economists think that high inflation rate in Iran is due to President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s wrong economic policy. He lends small and medium businesses enormous finances at low interest rates, subsidizes the people, and greatly invests public funds in the industrial sector.

According to experts, oil export revenues are also distributed improperly.

In December 2010, the government announced reduced state subsidies for the population. This resulted in a fourfold increase in petro lprices and cuts in bread benefits.

In late March, the conservative member of the Iranian parliament Ahmad Tavakoli claimed that the Iranian government obliged the local producers to keep prices down by any means under threat of imprisonment to alleviate the concequences after cutting the government subsidies.

According to Dadkhah, many believe that even indicated figures underestimate the extent of inflationary pressure in the Iranian economy.

To restrain or to reduce inflation, in the short run the Iranian government needs to control the increase in money supply by curbing its expenditures, the expert believes.

"It should also make a distinction between its budget in the domestic currency and its revenues from oil and its expenditures that are in the dollar," he told.

While in the long run, Iran has to promote production by engaging in true, as opposed to nominal, privatization and by removing obstacles in the way of private sector investment, Dadkhah said.

Furthermore, Iran has to come to terms with the United States, the West, and indeed the world, and it has to engage in negotiations to remove economic sanctions, he reiterated.

"Sanctions, although ineffective in changing Iran's political behavior, have been detrimental to its economic well being," Dadkhah told. "We can forecast that if Iran does not drastically change its economic policies, the inflation rate will accelerate."

The U.S. and other Western countries accuse Iran of developing nuclear weapons under cover of peaceful nuclear energy program. Tehran denies the accusation, saying its nuclear program is exclusively peaceful innature.

Resolutions adopted by the UN Security Council, as well as additional unilateral sanctions approved by the U.S. Congress and the foreign ministers of all EU countries, were primarily directed against thebanking, financial and energy sectors of Iran.

Restrictions imposed by the EU include the ban on the sale of equipment, technologies and services to Iran's energy sector; the same measure refers to the refining industry. New investments in Iran's energy sector have also been also prohibited as a whole. Because of lack of investments due to the sanctions, the production capacity is decreasing, and therefore, Iran cannot effectively increase production and develop this sector which is the main source of income for Iran.


/Trend/
URL: http://www.today.az/news/regions/84347.html

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