Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Sanctions, inflation forcing Iranians to cut back on food

- By Mohammad Nasiri

TEHRAN, Iran — Mehdi Dolatyari watched with dread in recent months as once-affordable goods at his central Tehran supermarke­t soared out of reach for his customers. Iranians who previously bought sacks of staple foods at the store now struggle to scrape together enough for meals, as the country’s currency sinks to new lows against the dollar.

“Rice is awfully expensive,” Dolatyari said, describing how its price has nearly doubled.

With U.S. sanctions still strangling the economy, record-breaking inflation has hit ordinary Iranians where it hurts most. Stunned shoppers are cutting meat and dairy from their diets, buying less each month.

The Iranian rial is now about 270,000 to the dollar — compared with 32,000 rials for $1 at the time of Tehran’s 2015 nuclear deal with world powers. That has decimated people’s salaries and savings.

Inflation has soared to 45%, the highest level since 1994, while food prices have skyrockete­d by nearly 60%.

The causes are multiple and overlappin­g. Among them: a sinking economy devastated by years of sanctions linked to Iran’s nuclear program; supply chain disruption­s from the coronaviru­s pandemic; and a steady decline in local production.

Gross domestic product plunged by almost 60% from 2017 to 2020, the Chamber of Commerce reported last week, with its head Gholamhoss­ein Shafeie describing the drop as a “serious warning for the future of Iran’s economy.”

Families now find their money increasing­ly worthless and must forgo foods once considered staples.

Compared with a year ago, the price of milk, yogurt

and eggs has swelled by nearly 80%. The cost of vegetables and meat has risen by some 70%, and the cheapest basics like bread and rice by more than 50%, according to the government statistics agency.

Many Iranians say they’re shopping less.

“Now I can only buy groceries once a month,” said Ghane Khiabani, a mother of three in Tehran.

Severe sanctions were reimposed by the U.S. in 2018 when then-President Donald Trump withdrew Washington from the landmark nuclear accord, and hope that world powers will find a path back to the deal remains elusive. Negotiatio­ns in Vienna over the agreement’s resurrecti­on paused in June just before hard-line Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi took office, with no date set for their resumption.

Iran’s weak economy suffered from mismanagem­ent for decades, experts say, but sanctions, particular­ly on the crucial energy sector that block the government from selling crude oil abroad, have hastened the decline.

“The main cause of the current high inflation is internal, bureaucrat­ic and executive inefficien­cies,” said economist Morteza Afghahi. “However, since we are dependent on selling crude oil ... and on foreign currencies earned through oil revenues, we have become more vulnerable under sanctions.”

The shortage of dollars has prompted the government to print more and more rials to pay what it owes, stimulatin­g the economy but stoking inflation.

As a result, many Iranians have been pushed into poverty. In the past year, the number of citizens living under the official poverty line — bringing home less than the equivalent of $46 a month — increased by nearly 40%, the government’s own figures show.

Another casualty of inflation may be the Iranian grocery store itself.

The explosion of major chains and online shopping, along with increasing­ly rising rents, slim profit margins and dwindling customers, have left smalland medium-sized shops struggling to survive.

 ?? EBRAHIM NOROOZI/AP ?? Record inflation is causing shoppers in Iran to cut meat and dairy from their diets and to purchase less each month. Above, shoppers last month in Tehran.
EBRAHIM NOROOZI/AP Record inflation is causing shoppers in Iran to cut meat and dairy from their diets and to purchase less each month. Above, shoppers last month in Tehran.

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