29 Mar 2024
Saturday 10 November 2018 - 10:42
Story Code : 326060

Iran's economy to suffer but likely ride out U.S. sanctions storm

Reuters | Parisa Hafezi,Jonathan Saul: Iran is likely to ride out the storm from U.S. oil sanctions, suffering recession but no economic meltdown, thanks to rising crude prices and deepening divisions between the United States and other major powers, officials and analysts say.

Irans situation is better than pre-2016 because of high oil prices and the fact that the U.S. is isolated this time, said a European diplomat who asked not to be further identified.

Iran emerged in early 2016 from years of global sanctions under a deal with world powers that curbed its disputed nuclear program. But President Donald Trump withdrew the United States from the deal in May, calling it flawed to Irans advantage, and reimposed far-reaching U.S. sanctions in phases, with the most damaging oil and banking penalties taking effect on Nov. 5.

Trump aims to force Washingtons longtime adversary to accept tougher restrictions on its nuclear activity, drop its ballistic missile program and scale back support for militant proxies in Middle East conflicts from Yemen to Syria.

But the broadly united front of world powers that enforced sanctions on Iran previously, pushing Iran into nuclear restraint, has unraveled since Trump took office and clashed with allies over everything from trade to collective security.

The other signatories to the nuclear deal - Germany, France, Britain, the European Union, Russia and China - have condemned Trumps walkout from the pact. The EU is preparing a special mechanism to enable payments for Iranian oil and other exports without U.S. dollars, possibly through a barter system.

It will be a difficult period but Irans economy will withstand it for various reasons, a second diplomat said, including (the fact of) Russia being under (U.S. and EU)sanctions, Saudi Arabia having its own financial and political issues, and (trade war) between China and the United States.

Big power disunity and EU moves to circumvent Trumps sanctions regime have given Tehran a psychological boost - but not dissuaded foreign businesses ranging from oil majors to trading houses and shipping concerns from pulling out of Iran for fear of incurring new U.S. penalties.

 

DEFIANCE

But Iranian officials are defiant, citing Trumps isolation in repudiating the nuclear deal, climbing oil prices and Trumps agreement to grant sanctions waivers to eight countries especially dependent on Iranian crude.

Crude prices are rising. Even if Irans oil sales drop to 800,000 barrels per day (bpd), we will be able to run the economy. But we will send much more than that. Our economy will be far from collapse, said a senior Iranian official.

Our budget is based on oil of $57 per barrel and is now over $75 per barrel.

In October, Irans crude exports were estimated at 1.82 million bpd by data intelligence company Kpler and 1.5 million bpd by another firm that traces Iranian shipments.

Trump granted 180-day sanctions waivers to China, India, South Korea, Japan, Italy, Greece, Taiwan and Turkey, which together took in over 80 percent of Iran oil exports last year, Refinitiv Eikon data shows.

Even without the exemptions, we will sell our oil. We will bypass sanctions. We have so many countries that are on our side. America cannot do a damn thing, said a senior official close to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

The sanctions, however, will inevitably erode Irans state finances and raise already high inflation and jobless rates, making life harder for ordinary Iranians.

Since May, when Trump took Washington out of the nuclear deal, prices of bread, cooking oil and other staples have soared and the value of the rial currency has plunged.

The rials weakness has sent prices of some imports rocketing, destroying jobs as some factories using imported parts have folded. Around 70 percent of small factories, businesses and workshops have begun to close down in the past few months due to scarcity of raw materials and hard currency, according to the Iranian state news agency IRNA.

Moreover, Trumps sanctions against Irans financial sector essentially make 30 banks and their subsidiaries off-limits to foreign lenders, undermining its means to facilitate trade.

Still, Iran demonstrated considerable resilience and ingenuity in coping with earlier international sanctions, and there is little to suggest Tehran could not do this again.

While ordinary Iranians struggled, Irans clerical and security establishment and business world sought kept the economy running by means including resorting to barter as well as foreign currencies other than the U.S. dollar.


Additional reporting by Tuqa Khalid; Writing by Parisa Hafezi and Jonathan Saul; Editing by Mark Heinrich




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