Time and options are running out for the Iranian regime
When Irans rial went into a free-fall against the US dollar on October 1,it was evidence of the fact that one of the last remnants of former president Mohammad Khatamis achievements had been jettisoned the unification of the multiple exchange rates in 2002. At the end of its war with Iraq,Iran had 12 exchange rates for the dollar,subsequently reduced by Hashemi Rafsanjani to four. Now,Iran is back to an official rate of approximately 12,000 rials to the dollar,a travel exchange rate restricted to $2,000,and the (black) market rate,which saw the currency plummet to 35,000 to the dollar.
The Islamic Republics economy has traditionally seen high liquidity. To absorb the cash floating around,the regime offered high interest rates for banks and government bonds. Therefore,no matter how hard the US- and EU-imposed sanctions are biting,the role of policy is the primary explanation of the rials fall. Its not that sanctions havent had any significant impact. Iran has lost half its oil markets abroad. Besides,the US penalty on any entity dealing with the CBI has made it extremely difficult for Tehran to park or route its oil money in late 2011,for instance,Dubais Noor Islamic Bank stopped clearing Irans oil money. With the EU embargo on its oil since July 2012 slashing Irans oil income by 45 per cent,and the country a great distance now from the 2.5 million barrels per day of crude it once exported,there arent enough petro dollars for the CBI to sustain the rials value.
And yet,the fact that those who rioted are mostly the conservative traders who had bankrolled the Islamic Revolution once and been staunch backers of the regime since has exposed to the world what Iran watchers had been saying economic mismanagement is the most tangible danger to the regime,even if it doesnt bring it down. The rials high value was politically determined. Its slide has destroyed perhaps the only genuine economic indicator. How did the regime make the mess messier? It ignored the CBIs opinion and the circumstances of high inflation and a deteriorating business climate and lowered interest rates. That was the moment the rial started plummeting. Ahmadinejad,however,chose to blame private money dealers,political opponents and even the press the mob.
The complicated strategic game,whereby the US is using the Israeli prime ministers rhetoric to pressure Tehran while appearing to hold Israel back,rules out military action against Irans nuclear programme for now. But that doesnt mitigate the regimes desperation at home. What will it do hereafter? Given its record,its unlikely to be able to rescue the detonated economy. It can sit with the P5+1 and get some of the sanctions eased,as Hillary Clinton has hinted. Even then,would Ahmadinejad reverse years of populism,that is,ill-supervised loans,large-scale housing projects,monthly doles for rising fuel and food prices his policy of sending oil money to every home? Ahmadinejad fought inflation not by balancing the budget,raising rates or restricting liquidity but by increasing imports,which amounted to almost $70 billion in 2009-10. Theres zero market confidence in the CBIs chances of mitigating the crisis. It cannot opt for the market rate as a new single rate without tackling inflation,and it cannot opt for the official rate a cheaper dollar with the sanctions in place and petro dollars scarce. Iran,as a result,is returning to the 1980s,which means increased rent-seeking,unfair advantages to state-run businesses and overwhelming corruption. Anybody invested in the geopolitical stability of the Gulf and its oil would pray something gives soon,and from within.
sudeep.paul@expressindia.com