Arab Times

Iran on edge of recession

Tough sanctions on economy biting hard: US study

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Halt

WASHINGTON, Feb 27, (AFP): Tough sanctions on Iran are biting hard, slashing oil revenue and pushing the country close to recession as it seeks ways such as bartering to stay afloat, a US government report said Tuesday.

“The combinatio­n of the various US and internatio­nal trade, investment, and financial sanctions has adversely affected the Iranian economy and its future outlook,” the US Government Accountabi­lity Office wrote in its report.

The congressio­nal watchdog released the report as world powers, including the United States, met with Iranian negotiator­s in Kazakhstan on Tuesday for key talks on Iran’s suspect nuclear program.

Iran is under the toughest sanctions regime — including four separate UN resolution­s — ever devised. The measures are aimed at forcing the country to rein in its nuclear program, which Western powers suspect is a covert bid to develop an atomic bomb.

Tehran has denied the allegation­s, and has refused to halt its uranium enrichment program, which it says is for civilian purposes only. Since US and internatio­nal sanctions were sharply tightened in 2010, “the Iranian economy has consistent­ly underperfo­rmed the economies of comparable peer countries across a number of key economic indicators,” the GAO said.

“For example, Iran’s oil export revenues fell by 18 percent from 2010 to 2012, while its peers’ oil export revenues increased by 50 percent,” it said.

Iranian exports fell from 2.5 million barrels a day in 2011 to around 1.3 mbpd in November 2012, it said, citing the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

Iran’s ability to ship and sell its oil — a key source of foreign currency and vital to its economy — has been reduced, while financial sanctions have closed access to internatio­nal banks and financial institutio­ns. Inflation rose to an estimated 27 percent in late 2012, while unemployme­nt is forecast to hover between 15 and 16.6 percent in coming years.

The GAO, using IMF and private ana- lyst services data, said Iran’s global domestic product shrank 1.4 percent last year, and it cited one analyst, IHS Global Insight, which said GDP will contract a further 1.3 percent in 2013.

“According to IHS Global Insight, the US and EU sanctions that target Iranian oil exports and the Central Bank of Iran are harsher and more punitive than previously enacted sanctions, and will likely push the Iranian economy into recession.”

The economic downturn is forcing Iranian leaders into creative ways to try to circumvent the sanctions, including introducin­g a bartering system for its oil with some nations. “Open sources reported Iran has entered into barter agreements with countries including India, exchanging oil for food, medicine, and commercial products in lieu of using traditiona­l payment methods,” the report said. It is also selling its oil at a discounted price, as much as 10 percent lower, according to one official interviewe­d by the GAO.

“However, these recent agreements have thus far not fully offset the reduced exports to the EU and others,” it added.

In another sign of the hardship, the GAO found that US and European Union imports of humanitari­an goods — including medicines, medical devices, wheat and barley — had leaped by 35 percent in the first 10 months of last year. The EU was the main supplier of such goods.

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