Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Currency Slide Fuels Tehran Market Protests


(MENAFN- The Arabian Post)

A sharp fall in Iran's rial has triggered demonstrations in the heart of Tehran, exposing mounting pressure on household budgets and traders as prices of basic goods accelerate amid tightening financial conditions and long-running sanctions.

State television on Monday broadcast blurred footage it described as limited unrest by merchants at Grand Bazaar, while videos circulating on social media indicated wider participation, with shopkeepers pulling down shutters and chanting slogans against rising costs. The broadcaster said security forces were deployed to restore order, and authorities played down the scale of the protests.

Rial weakness spills into daily life - the plunge has intensified inflationary stress already borne by wage earners and small businesses. The currency touched a fresh low in unofficial trading, according to market trackers, lifting import costs and pushing food prices higher across urban centres. Traders interviewed by local media said wholesale prices for staples such as rice, cooking oil and meat had climbed sharply, forcing retailers to pass on increases or close temporarily.

Officials have attributed volatility to speculative activity and external pressure, reiterating that monetary authorities are acting to stabilise the market. The Central Bank of Iran has pointed to measures including tighter oversight of exchange shops, increased supply of foreign currency for essential imports, and enforcement actions against what it calls illicit trading networks. Economists counter that confidence remains fragile as households anticipate further depreciation and rush to convert savings into hard currency or goods.

The demonstrations underscore the sensitivity of the bazaar, a traditional barometer of economic sentiment with deep links to commerce and politics. Past episodes of currency stress have prompted similar closures, often signalling broader discontent among the merchant class that employs large numbers and anchors supply chains. Analysts say even short disruptions can ripple through distribution networks, aggravating shortages and price swings.

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Sanctions continue to constrain access to global finance and energy revenues, limiting policy room. While oil exports have found buyers through discounts and intermediaries, proceeds are often locked abroad or subject to delays, complicating liquidity management at home. At the same time, fiscal pressures have grown as the government seeks to fund subsidies and public sector wages in the face of elevated prices.

Authorities insist that fundamentals will improve as trade arrangements expand with regional partners and as export earnings stabilise. Officials have highlighted barter deals and local-currency settlements with neighbours as buffers against dollar scarcity. Critics argue these channels are insufficient to offset structural imbalances, including a widening gap between official and street exchange rates that distorts pricing and fuels arbitrage.

On the streets of Tehran, the immediate concern is purchasing power. Pensioners and salaried workers say pay adjustments lag behind the pace of price increases, eroding living standards. Shopkeepers complain of shrinking margins as customers cut back and suppliers demand faster payments indexed to the dollar. Some merchants said they closed their stalls to protest unpredictable costs and to avoid selling at a loss.

Security responses have been measured but visible. Police patrols were reported around key commercial districts, and officials warned against what they called attempts to exploit economic grievances. No official figures on arrests were released, and the interior ministry said it was monitoring developments.

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The Arabian Post

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