Stagnation, Unemployment, and Bankruptcy of Private Sector

Supreme Leader Khamenei (r) with IRGC chief Mohammad Ali Jafari (file photo)
March 20, 2010 was the last day of the Iranian
calendar year 1388. That year began well, with a surplus of some items such as
potatoes which was distributed free by the government. But the distribution was
limited to the election season and as the year grew to its end, the distribution
ended too. Interestingly enough, at the end of the year the administration
pushed a bill through the Majlis to provide the public with water, electricity,
power, gasoline and natural gas at market prices without the traditional
subsides. Meanwhile, the Iranian economy suffered from severe stagnation and
unemployment in 1388 as the country's important and money-making firms were
handed over to the Islamic Passdaran Revolutionary Guards Corps (IRGC).
Sadra and Telecommunications Handed to IRGC
One of the most important developments of 1388
was the IRGC's greater takeover of the country's economy. Two huge firms, one
in gasoline and natural gas industry, named Sadra, and the other a national
telecommunications firm were handed over to consortiums controlled by the IRGC.
On 25 April 2009, 51.18% of the naval-industrial giant Sadra was sold to a
consortium controlled by IRGC's Khatam al-Anbia force. Exactly five months
later, at the height of popular unrest, 50% of Iran Telecommunications Company
was sold to the two firms owned by the IRGC in what amounted to the largest
stock market transaction in Iran's history.

Tehran Stock Exchange on the day TCI deal took place
Non-Existent Growth
When Mahmoud Ahmadinejad announced that the
Iranian economy had growth at the rate of 6.9% in 1387, he was not unaware that
Iran's Central Bank had released a report announcing that the rate of economic
growth was less than 3%!
Widespread stagnation in bazaars across the nation, decreasing trade volumes, an
increase in the number of returned checks, and a fall in the national economic
output are among the signs pointing to an unprecedented stagnation of the
country's economy. Some experienced bazaaris go as far as comparing the present
economic conditions to those immediately following the Iran-Iraq War and Iran's
acceptance of UN Resolution 598.
Currently, estimates point to a potentially backbreaking inflation rate of 50%
in 1389. The country's largest economic bill of the past 30 years, the subsidy
reform plan, passed in the final days of the year, though the administration
introduced the bill with massive enthusiasm and received it with disappointment
from the Majlis. The year 1388 ended while the bill's implementation schedule
has not yet been determined and people still do not know how much they will be
paying for goods such as water, electricity and gasoline; although it is
unlikely for the price increases to take place in the initial 3 months of the
year.
... Payvand News - 03/23/10 ... --