20 Apr 2024
Saturday 3 November 2018 - 11:17
Story Code : 325429

Iranians blame Trump, not Tehran, for slumping economy



Sputnik - US sanctions against Iran will take effect again on Monday, six months after the Trump administration withdrew from the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), or the Iran Nuclear Deal.




Now, the question is what other countries will do aboutthe sanctions and whether waivers will make a difference. Hamed Mousavi, a professor ofpolitical science withthe University ofTehran, joins Radio Sputnik'sLoud & Cleartodiscuss.

"I think the Trump administration has somewhat backed upfrom its earlier goal ofbringing Iranian oil exports tozero, and I think there are two main reasons forthat," Mousavi told Loud & Clear hosts John Kiriakou and Brian Becker.

"The first one being it is impractical inthe short term; a lot ofUS allies such asSouth Korea, Japan aswell asIndia have pressured Washington forwaivers forseveral months now, and I think Washington has come tothe conclusion that atleast inthe foreseeable future, it cannot bring Iranian oil experts tozero," the professor said.
"The second factor is that there is very little spare capacity inthe global oil market right now, so any attempt tobring Iranian oil exports tozero is going tohave a considerable effect onthe prices ofoil worldwide, and I don't think that's something the Trump administration really wants, especially right beforethe congressional elections," Mousavi added.


The waivers aren't intended toallow countries totrade withIran forever they are meant toexpire in180 days togive countries that trade withIran time toreduce their reliance onthe country's oil exports.

"Every 180 days they are going toreduce the amount ofoil these countries can import fromIran. Nevertheless, fromIran's perspective, I think it is a lifeline," Mousavi said. "You have tounderstand that oil exports are the main lifeline ofIran's economy. That's where most ofthe government's revenue comes from."

"It has impacts all overthe Iranian economy," he added.

The sanctions that will take effect November 4 target Iran's energy, banking and shipping sectors.
"The pressure ofsanctions is felt all overIran, especially bypoorer classes," Mousavi said. "We have tounderstand that sanctions really hurt ordinary people rather thanthe government, and the pressures have increased inrecent months."


Mousavi said that Iran's currency, the Rial, has already lost over70 percent ofits value inthe pastsix months. Iranians, however, appear tobe placing the blame onthe Trump administration asopposed tothe Iranian government, Mousavi said.

On Friday,Sputnik News reportedthat the US Treasury Department is prepared totarget SWIFT, an international payment system used bybanks worldwide, forcontinuing todo business withIran. Without access toSWIFT, banks inany country have a hard time conducting transactions.

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