Overcast
68°
DeKalb, IL
Overcast|Forecast »

Iran rulers eye fixing currency collapse from protected perch

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Just as Iran’s currency was rattling near bottom after a stunning free fall, officials in Tehran opened a trade exhibition that included advanced engineering tools, heavy machinery and robotics.

Nearly every Iranian booth had some connection to the country’s powerful Revolutionary Guard and the ruling system it safeguards.

This display of the regime’s industrial muscle showcases why the collapse of Iran’s rial is unlikely to pose any immediate threats to the country’s real centers of power, despite protests last week that brought quick speculation in the West about the stirrings of a popular revolt.

The top end of Iran’s economy remains fully in the hands of the Revolutionary Guard and its networks, which span from oil to aerospace.

And the lifeblood for the ruling clerics and the Guard still comes from Iran’s oil exports that – on paper at least – bring in tens of millions of dollars a day to buffer against the blows hitting the rest of the country: A tanking currency, skyrocketing prices for imported goods and double-digit
inflation.

“There is a lot of breathless talk about the regime collapsing,” said Salman Shaikh, director of The Brookings Doha Center in Qatar. “It is no doubt under severe pressures and cannot ignore the currency situation, but the fundamentals of the economy, from the standpoint of the ruling system, are still OK.”

The sanctions target oil exports, banking and other sectors. They are imposed over Iran’s nuclear program. The U.S. and allies fear that the country’s uranium enrichment labs could eventually produce warhead-grade material.

Iran insists its nuclear efforts are only for energy and medical uses.

But some in Washington and European capitals openly say that, the nuclear issue aside, they would be delighted if sanctions brought the downfall of Iran’s clerical leadership.

To be sure, it would take far more than the small-scale demonstrations in Tehran last week to pose any immediate threat to Iran’s ruling establishment, which
has the huge strength of the Revolutionary Guard behind it.

But neither can Iranian leaders afford to ignore the latest upheavals. The battle for perceptions and longer term stability goes by different rules.

Previous Page|1||||
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Reader Poll

Do you shop at farmers markets and farm stands?

Weekly
Once or twice a summer
Never