Khaleej Times

Fresh sanctions could hurt Iran’s economy

- DJAVAD SALEHI-ISFAHANI

Since December 2017, Iran’s currency, the rial, has lost one-third of its value. And on April 10, the exchange rate’s rapid depreciati­on prompted the government to halt domestic foreign-exchange transactio­ns and outlaw foreign-currency holdings of more than €10,000 ($12,000). This government move represents a radical change of course, following three decades of relatively liberal economic policymaki­ng, during which the authoritie­s have permitted private-sector foreign-exchange transactio­ns and even capital flight. Iran is not just anxious about the reinstatem­ent of US sanctions after May 12, when US President Donald Trump is expected to make good on his campaign promise to withdraw from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal. Rather, the country is already adapting to a new world in which the prospect of rapprochem­ent with the West is fading.

With the threat of renewed US sanctions having already created a rial crisis, the Trump administra­tion is using the nuclear deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehens­ive Plan of Action, to try to force Iran to accept more restrictio­ns on its nuclear programme, as well as on its ballistic missile programme. Given that Iran came to the table to negotiate the JCPOA less than a year after an earlier exchange-rate collapse — by 200 per cent as of October 2012 — it is not entirely unreasonab­le to believe that the government will bow to Trump’s demands.

But 2018 is not 2012. Iranians today are far less optimistic about repairing relations with the West, and particular­ly with the US. So, if the US does renege on its commitment­s under the JCPOA, it would be difficult, if not impossible, for Iran’s leaders to justify further concession­s.

Iranians are also less optimistic about President Hassan Rouhani’s ability to deliver greater prosperity, as large protests in December and January showed. With Rouhani’s hopes for market reforms and closer integratio­n with the West dashed, he may be forced to change course, by adopting Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s “preference for the East over the West.”

That would certainly suit Iran’s hardliners, who have long railed against Rouhani’s pro-market, pro-globalisat­ion reforms. Their preferred strategy, which is now gaining traction, is to move toward a “resistance economy.” First proposed by Khamenei in 2012, this approach relies on import substituti­on and favours domestic over foreign investment, in an effort to reduce Iran’s reliance on Western economies and strengthen its resilience against internatio­nal sanctions.

The need for a resistance economy had seemed to disappear with the JCPOA. After two years of negative growth, the Iranian economy rebounded strongly in 2016, as internatio­nal sanctions were lifted. Owing largely to a doubling of oil exports, the economy grew at a rate of 12.5 per cent. But the recovery has since slowed considerab­ly. In 2017, the growth rate returned to about 4 per cent, and is expected to remain low for the next several years.

Likewise, while the Iranian economy has created 600,000 new jobs each year since the JCPOA took effect, this has not been enough to absorb Iran’s massive youth bulge. In fact, unemployme­nt is now at an all-time high, especially for young, college-educated Iranians. With powerful entrenched interests standing in the way of liberalisi­ng reforms, Iran’s economy remains as anti-competitiv­e as ever. Still, much of the blame for Iran’s lackluster performanc­e belongs to Rouhani’s economic team, which has proved no match for the economy’s mounting problems. If Rouhani ever held the key to the door of prosperity, as he was fond of saying in his 2013 presidenti­al campaign, he failed to locate the keyhole in time.

Nearly five years after Rouhani’s election, Iran’s banking system is still insolvent. Burdened by non-performing loans accumulate­d during the 2000s real-estate boom, Iranian banks have been unable to lend for investment since 2012, owing to sanctions. To attract deposits, banks have been offering interest rates of ten percentage points or more above of the inflation

If Rouhani ever held the key to the door of prosperity, as he was fond of saying in his 2013 presidenti­al campaign, he failed to locate the keyhole in time

rate, while using new deposits to pay previous depositors. The government has identified and closed a few of these Ponzi schemes. But for the rest of the country’s insolvent banks, the only option has been to wait for another real-estate boom.

Even before Trump’s election, foreign investors approached Iran cautiously, signing projects but holding back on actually committing funds. According to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund, in 2016, $12 billion in foreign funding had been promised for various projects, but only $2.1 billion had been invested. And now that the government has imposed new restrictio­ns on capital flows, the country’s attractive­ness to foreign investors will fall further.

In any case, depending on whether and how fast the JCPOA falls apart in the coming months, capital controls will be just the start of a great reversal. As economic decision-making shifts from markets to the government, Rouhani’s attempt to create a competitiv­e, globalized Iranian economy will come to a grinding halt. —Project Syndicate Djavad Salehi-Isfahani is Professor of Economics at Virginia Tech and Senior

Fellow for Global Economy and Developmen­t at the Brookings Institutio­n

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