Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad will have a hard time meeting his election pledge of "putting oil money on people''s tables" as crude prices tumble, industrial investment shrinks and spending on imports soars.
Ahmadinejad swept to power in 2005 on a populist campaign of ploughing huge amounts of cash into local infrastructure and granting low-interest business loans to create jobs.
In the financial year 2007-8 to March, government coffers pocketed more than 80 billion dollars in oil earnings -- half its total revenue and a dramatic 31 percent leap over the year for OPEC''s number two exporter.
Oil prices surged to record highs in July of close to 150 dollars a barrel, a mouth-watering figure for the energy-dependent nation. But the price has since plunged to well below 70 dollars amid fears of a global recession.
"Iran''s oil party is over," "OPEC approaching bankruptcy" and "Alarm tolls for Iran''s economy as OPEC oil price drops," are some of the gloomy headlines in the local press.
Crude income accounts for 80 percent of foreign earnings, making the economy highly vulnerable to oil price shifts, and Iran is calling for a two million barrel per day output cut when OPEC meets on Friday.
Housing shortage in Tajikistan
EDB: Tajikistan anticipates strong economic growth, moderate Inflation, and stable currency
Tajikistan faces worsening electricity shortages
Kazakhstan reduces quotas for foreign workers in 2025
LNG prices decrease in Tajikistan
2025-2030 declared Years of Digital Economy and Innovation Development in Tajikistan
Tajikistan drops one position in the Global Passport Power Rank
Two Uzbeks sentenced for fighting in Ukraine on Russia's side
A Trading House of Uzbekistan for construction materials opened in Dushanbe
A group of drug traffickers detained with 127 kg of narcotic drugs in Dushanbe
All news
Авторизуйтесь, пожалуйста