The Post

Pain unlikely to alter Iran’s nuclear goals

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A BIG oil price slide will hurt Iran’s attempts to rescue battered living standards, but economic pain is unlikely to soften its stance in nuclear talks or end aid to allies such as Syria, matters seen by its ruling clerics as strategic priorities.

Economic misery caused by sanctions and mismanagem­ent has been a reality for years, and while social strains in the 76 million population are deep, the clerics will seek to contain them, say experts examining Iran’s budget plans for 2015.

The largest drop in oil prices since the 2008 financial crisis means more budget pressure for the Organisati­on of Petroleum Exporting Countries member, already bereft of tens of billions of dollars in oil revenue because of Western sanctions and years of economic mismanagem­ent.

And tougher economic times may spur Tehran’s determinat­ion to end a nuclear dispute and lift sanctions that isolate it from the global banking system and deter most foreign investors. But significan­t changes in Iran’s regional strategy, including its approach to any nuclear deal, are unlikely.

That is partly because funds for security affairs come from Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, not the government. He also decides nuclear policy.

‘‘Our support to our brother Assad will never change,’’ said a senior Iranian official, referring to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. ‘‘Because of [declining] oil prices we face economic hardship . . . but we will mange to continue our support to Syria, militarily and financiall­y.’’

Ali Vaez, of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group think-tank, said the oil price fall would hurt, but was unlikely to make Iran accept a nuclear deal ‘‘that it views as lopsided’’.

‘‘Iran’s support for its allies in Iraq and Syria is not a question of means, it’s a strategic necessity. This is why neither the fall of the rial in 2012 or economic malaise in 2013 affected Iran’s support for its Syrian and Iraqi allies.’’

Iran and world powers are negotiatin­g to end a standoff over Tehran’s nuclear goals. Tehran denies Western charges that it is seeking nuclear weapons.

President Hassan Rouhani presented a ‘‘cautious, tight’’ budget on December 7 in response to falling oil prices, now almost $10 a barrel below the $70 his budget was based on.

Spending was 6 per cent above this year, a real terms cut because of inflation of 20 per cent .

But with revenues pressured, plans to hike defence spending 33 per cent prompted speculatio­n that Rouhani wants to placate security hardliners, hoping they will indulge his bid to win a nuclear deal and end sanctions.

Powerful anti-Western hawks in the Islamic Revolution­ary Guards Corps (IRGC), who report to Khamenei, have been wary the negotiatio­ns.

They have tolerated the talks, diplomats speculate, largely because his big 2013 election win revealed the depth of anger over economic mismanagem­ent and support for his aim of ending Iran’s internatio­nal isolation.

Mehrdad Emadi of Betamatrix Internatio­nal Consultanc­y suggested Rouhani had to consider the IRGC in setting economic policy because it could spoil any nuclear deal.

Greater defence spending was aimed at ‘‘giving them a big piece of the public pie so they can stop

of kicking up a fuss when it comes to negotiatio­ns, especially those with the Americans.’’

‘‘The IRGC are extremely sensitive to any reduction of ‘military aid’ to what they see as strategic allies,’’ Emadi said.

The IRGC could ruin any rapprochem­ent with the West.

Last year, Iran granted Syria a $3.6 billion credit facility to buy oil products, with another $1b for non-oil products. Domestical­ly the government has ways of mitigating the pain. One is gradual depreciati­on of the official exchange rate at which it converts oil revenues from dollars into rials. This allows a progressiv­ely smaller amount of dollars to supply the same rial revenues.

The central bank’s official exchange has dropped to 27,043 from 25,651 at the end of June and 24,774 at the end of last year. Next year’s budget is based on a rate of 28,500, showing the government plans to continue this strategy.

Meanwhile, the free-market price of the rial has stabilised about 35,000, far from lows near 40,000 two years ago. That suggests most Iranians think that while cheaper oil will pressure the rial, they do not yet expect an economic collapse or a run on the cur- rency. Emadi said Rouhani would try to shield the poorest from spending cuts to avoid any repeat of the unrest that followed 2009’s disputed presidenti­al election.

A 30 per cent rise in bread prices on December 1 rattled Iranians, but there was no major unrest. Emadi said the government later took steps to compensate poorer households.

There could be further subsidy cuts but open protest was unlikely since ‘‘the regime’s machinery of repression still makes this very risky‘‘, said Scott Lucas of EA WorldView, a specialist website on Iran and Syria.

 ?? Photo: REUTERS ?? Pain in the price: Iran’s petrochemi­cal complex in Assaluyeh seaport on the Perisan Gulf coast. The drop in the price of oil is hurting the country.
Photo: REUTERS Pain in the price: Iran’s petrochemi­cal complex in Assaluyeh seaport on the Perisan Gulf coast. The drop in the price of oil is hurting the country.

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