Today.Az » World news » Sanction-struck Iranian government eyes people’s pockets
11 March 2013 [18:20] - Today.Az
A member of the
Iranian parliament has reported that the Iranian government is insisting
on increasing fuel prices by 4.5 times, aiming to gain 1250 trillion
rials (about $102 billion based on current official USD rate) in
revenue.
The government expects expenditures of 1,200 trillion rials (about
$98 billion) in the next solar year's budget bill. The bill will likely
be ratified by Parliament; this figure shows an approximately 82 percent
rise compared to the current year's figure. Iran's solar year will
start on March 19.
The Iranian government has cut a part of energy carriers' subsides
since December 2010, but insists on implementing the second phase of the
subsidy reform plan. The parliament has passed a bill and set the
government's revenues through freeing up prices at 560 trillion rials
(about $46 billion). The Ahmadinejad administration pays 450,000 rials
(about $37) per capita to over 72 million Iranians, equaling $3 billion
per month.
According to the Mehr News Agency, Ahmad Tavakkoli released his
report on March 11, in which he said that the government has gained some
280 trillion rials (about $23 billion) annually in the frame of the
first phase of the subsidy reform plan. "If the second phase of the plan
is implemented, fuel prices should be increased by 4.5 times", he
added.
Tavakkoli says that government should have allocate 50 percent of the
revenues from cutting subsidies and increasing energy carriers price to
pay in cash for citizens, and the rest of value should have been
allocated to the production sectors, but have not, and government even
borrowed 90 trillion rials (about $7 billion) from the Central Bank and
paid the total sum as cash subsidies, he explained.
Based on a report by the International Energy Agency, sanctions
decreased Iran's oil exports by $40 billion in 2012. According to OPEC,
oil gained above $114 billion in oil revenues in 2011, accounting for
78.9 percent of Iran's total exports income.
The Iranian administration has set oil revenues at just $31 billion
in the next year's national budget bill, showing a 40 percent fall year
on year. Some 60 percent of oil revenues are taken into account in the
national budget bill, and the rest are allocated to the National
Development Fund, the National Iranian Oil Company, and underdeveloped
areas.
To compensate for the fall in oil exports, the government has
increased revenues significantly through raising fuel prices and has
also increased tax incomes by 16 percent to 530 trillion rials (about
$43 billion) in new year budget bill.
In regard to Tavakkoli's comment about consuming 64 percent of energy
carriers by production, service, and transportation sectors, raising
fuel prices by 4.5 times not only will lead to rise in prices of
consumer goods, fall in growth rate, rising unemployment, and rise in
service prices, but also it will affect energy consumption costs by
people who account for consuming 36 percent of total fuels in the
country.
Meanwhile, the International Monetary Fund has reported that Iran's
economy contracted by 0.9 percent in 2012. According to Tavakkoli, the
rate has been envisioned to be contracted by 0.6 percent in the next
solar year.
He also cited a report by the Ministry on Industry, Mines, and Trade,
based on which 18 main production groups out of a total 20 groups saw
0.3 to 79 percent fall in production and just 2 groups experienced 2 to 8
percent rise in production.
Beside economic contraction, Iran's national currency, the rial, has
sharply lost value against the dollar as well. The USD is currently sold
at 33,000 rials compared to 17,000 rials in December 2011. Liquidity in
Iran hit 4380 trillion rials (about $357 billion) in the tenth calendar
month of Day (ended on January 19), which has grown 6.25 times since
2005 when President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad took power.
17 major macro figures in Iran's new budget bill (based on billion rials)
|
Current solar year
|
Next solar year
|
Y/Y percent
|
budget ceiling
|
5665610
|
7305260
|
28.9
|
administration's running budget
|
1442690
|
1668640
|
15.6
|
incomes
|
653290
|
919950
|
40.8
|
disposing capital assets
|
698760
|
673700
|
-3.6
|
revenues gained through exporting crude oil and gas condensates
|
665800
|
658700
|
-1.5
|
oil revenues (in billion dollars)
|
51
|
31
|
-39.3
|
dollar price set in the budget bill (in rials)
|
12260
|
21300
|
73.7
|
oil price set in the budget bill (in dollars)
|
85
|
95
|
11.7
|
disposing financial assets
|
74980
|
90630
|
- 17.3
|
current expenditures
|
1010000
|
1215040
|
20.3
|
possessing capital assets (developmental)
|
373710
|
397450
|
- 4
|
possessing financial assets
|
34530
|
80880
|
134
|
operating budget deficit
|
360000
|
295090
|
- 10.1
|
budget of government companies
|
4211760
|
5852640
|
38.9
|
paying civil servants off (salary)
|
313740
|
502130
|
60
|
income tax
|
457000
|
530220
|
16
|
subsidy reform resources
|
660000
|
1200000
|
81.8
|
Dalga Khatinoglu /Trend/
|