HYPERINFLATION:
Iran's Currency Is In A State Of Total Collapse
The
Iranian rial plunged today against the U.S. dollar as western
sanctions against the state's oil exports are really starting to up
the pressure on Iran.
2
October, 2012
Earlier
today, the
rial was down 7 percent against the dollar, meaning
it had lost a quarter of its value in just the past week.
However,
it continued to drop throughout the day, losing more than 13
percent, according
to the Jerusalem Post.
Israeli
finance minister Yuval Steinitz said the Iranian economy is now "on
the verge of collapse." Via The
Guardian:
Israel's
finance minister, Yuval Steinitz, said Iran's economy "is
not collapsing, but it is on the verge of collapse". The loss of
oil revenue would approach $45bn-$50bn (£28bn-£31bn) by the end of
the year, he told Israel Radio. "The Iranians are in great
economic difficulties as a result of the sanctions."
His
comments followed the leak last week of an internal foreign
ministry report, which said international sanctions were having a
profound effect on Iran's economy and could be destabilising the
government. But the measures had yet to persuade the regime to
abandon its nuclear programme and, therefore, additional sanctions
were needed.
According
to an anonymous Israeli official quoted in Haaretz, Israel had
stepped up efforts to persuade the EU to impose a fresh round of
sanctions.
BBC analyst
Sebastian Usher wrote that the plunge in the rial was so bad today
that Iranian websites that publish exchange rates for the
rial blacked
out quotes for the currency's price on the website:
The
Iranian rial is in freefall. The
collapse was so precipitous that Iranian currency websites blanked
out the rate.
Usher also
provided some color on what it's like on the ground in Iran right
now as
fallout from the collapse of the real ensues:
International
attention may be focused on the country's alleged ambitions for a
nuclear bomb, but for ordinary Iranians it is the economy that is the
real issue.
Inflation
is raging, making some basic foodstuffs prohibitively expensive.
Economic sanctions, led by the US and European Union, have played a
key role. Iran has been all but frozen out of the global banking
system, with its oil exports slashed.
But
government mismanagement has also played its part. A government
exchange centre undercutting the black market rate, launched just
last week, has only made things worse. Opposition websites are
castigating the authorities, with one website accusing the central
bank of being incapable of getting the situation under control.
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