The Arizona Republic

Iran sanctions eased, but pinch persists

- By Aya Batrawy and Jonathan Fahey

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The sanctions relief offered to Iran by the U.S. and five world powers has begun to get the gears of commerce slowly turning again in an economy that remains in shambles.

The Obama administra­tion estimates relief from some sanctions in exchange for a temporary pause in Iran’s nuclear enrichment program will amount to just $7 billion. That’s a meager amount for the economy of a nation of nearly 80 million people — it’s less than one month’s worth of Iran’s oil production and just 7 percent of Iran’s overseas cash that remains frozen under the sanctions.

Still, Iranians see the move as a much needed step toward a more normal economy after years of crippling inflation and job losses.

“Markets operate on a psychologi­cal basis,” says Ray Takeyh, an Iran expert at the Council on Foreign Relations and former U.S. State Department senior adviser. “The psychology of Iranian commerce has changed.”

Rahmat Dehghani, a glazier, says he has been invited to discuss a new hotel project in the northeaste­rn city of Mashhad, 550 miles east of the capital, Tehran.

“For months, the owner had delayed any discussion about his project since the future was not clear for any investment,” he said.

Sanctions squeeze

The Iranian economy was already struggling under the weight of corruption, mismanagem­ent and costly food, energy and cash subsides for the poor when the U.S. and Europe broadened economic sanctions against Iran to include its crucial oil and banking sectors in late 2011.

Oil sales plummeted by about 1.5 million barrels per day, depriving Iran of about $80 billion since early 2012, according to the White House. At the same time, much of the revenue Iran did earn from exports to a few Asian countries that were allowed to buy Iranian oil remained out of the country.

The sanctions required oil buyers to pay into locked bank accounts that Iran can access only to purchase non-sanctioned goods or humanitari­an supplies.

Manufactur­ers found it increasing­ly difficult to buy crucial components to make products or keep factories running. Inflation and unemployme­nt soared and Iran’s national currency, the rial, lost more than half its value.

“People can’t save, they can’t invest, it’s hard to buy a home, no one can trust the currency, no one knows what they really earn,” says Anthony Cordesman, a Middle East and energy expert at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies.

At the same time, Iran is believed to have provided the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad with billions of dollars in economic aid and fuel over the past three years as Syria’s civil war erupted.

Public grumbling grew. Prices for staples such as chicken and lamb climbed out of reach of many low-income Iranians. Late last year, Iranian riot police were deployed at key intersecti­ons in Tehran after sporadic protests flared.

Rouhani’s election

That frustratio­n led to the election of President Hassan Rouhani, who campaigned on economic reforms. Iranians blamed former President Mahmoud Ahmadineja­d for mismanagem­ent and corruption that many believe was at least as damaging to the economy as the West’s sanctions.

The bleak conditions may have also forced Rouhani — backed by Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei — to back the nuclear deal struck Sunday in Geneva between Iran and the U.S., Russia, China, France, the U.K. and Germany.

The White House says the nuclear deal keeps in place “the overwhelmi­ng majority of the sanctions regime.”

Almost all of Iran’s approximat­ely $100 billion in foreign exchange holdings remains inaccessib­le or restricted by sanctions.

That means for the vast majority of Iranians, the deal will do little to alleviate the cost of daily life. Inflation hovers around 35 percent, pushing the price of goods ever higher.

Officially, unemployme­nt is around 13 percent, though that number is widely thought by experts to be much higher.

“Iran will continue to bleed financiall­y,” said risk consultanc­y Eurasia Group in a report.

Some hope offered

But sanctions will be suspended on gold and precious metals, Iran’s auto sector and petrochemi­cal exports.

Restrictio­ns on oil exports will get no tighter, as they were slated to, and restrictio­ns on insurance were loosened, which will help make it easier for Iran to sell the oil it can. The agreement also gives Iran’s aviation industry a boost by allowing airlines to buy needed parts.

And, importantl­y, the deal began to restore some confidence in the Iranian economy after an extraordin­arily dark period. The public reaction to the deal was largely positive.

Reza Ghazinouri, a former Iranian student ac- tivist now at the Washington-based human rights group United For Iran, says Iranians seem overwhelmi­ngly happy with the deal and what it could mean for the economy. But with sanctions relief so limited, he worries hopes are too high.

“A very very small percentage of people are unhappy with this,” he says. “The rest of the people are really happy. But they are hoping too much.”

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