UK paper: Iran’s economy proved resilient in face of sanctions
(last modified Sat, 12 Mar 2022 17:41:20 GMT )
Mar 12, 2022 17:41 UTC
  • UK paper: Iran’s economy proved resilient in face of sanctions

A weekly newspaper says Iran’s economy was hurt badly by sanctions in recent years, but it did not collapse due to its resilient nature caused by export diversification, import substitution and flourishing stock market, among other strength factors.

The Economist reported on Saturday that over the past decade, the Iranian economy suffered recessions, devaluations and chronic inflation under the pressure of worldwide sanctions, which targeted the country’s oil exports and banks and froze its foreign assets.

However, it added, the economy did not crash because Iran’s manufacturers remained resilient while many firms survived and prospered.

The newspaper also referred to the willingness of some privately owned refiners to take the risk of sanctions-busting in exchange for a hefty oil price discount.

“There are three explanations for Iran’s resilience. First, though sanctions have been extensive and assiduously policed, they are subject to leakage. Iran has been able to export several hundred thousand barrels of oil a day. Much of it ends up in China, marked as oil from Malaysia, Oman or the United Arab Emirates (UAE),” it said.

“A second source of resilience is export diversification. Iran has a range of manufacturing industries. Some of the bigger ones, such as mining and metal-bashing, benefit from access to cheap, reliable energy. In addition, Iran has land borders with several populous countries, including Pakistan and Turkey. A chunk of Iran’s land-based trade is undocumented and thus hard to police.”

The weekly further highlighted the role of Iranian manufacturers in thwarting the illegal sanctions and maintaining the country’s self-sufficiency.

“A third factor is import substitution. The weaker rial has put imported goods beyond the reach of many Iranians. But it has been a boon for manufacturers serving the home market of 83m,” it said.

“Iran’s stock market reflects this resilient economy. Some of the larger firms are on the sanctions list, but hundreds of smaller ones are not. Stocks have proved a good hedge against devaluation and inflation. Many locals have noticed this. The market exploded in 2020 as retail investors piled in. That mini-bubble has since burst.”

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