Speaker: Next Budget to Address Economic Concerns

  Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani said that the budget bill for the new Iranian year (to start on March 21, 2019) will focus on resolving economic issues to lower unemployment rate, increase the volume of non-oil exports, and boost national production. Larijani said that Iran will focus on non-oil exports in the new Iranian year, […]

 

Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani said that the budget bill for the new Iranian year (to start on March 21, 2019) will focus on resolving economic issues to lower unemployment rate, increase the volume of non-oil exports, and boost national production.

Larijani said that Iran will focus on non-oil exports in the new Iranian year, adding that the parliament is working on the issue of non-oil exports in planning the budget bill.

He noted that the issues of national production, housing industry, as well as subsidies for the poor are top priorities of the country’s budget.

The parliament speaker said that if the issue of national production is resolved, the unemployment rate will be reduced for sure.

Earlier this month, on December 8, Head of Iran’s Management and Planning Organization Mohammad Baqer Nobakht said that planners have focused on reducing the pressure posed by US sanctions on Iranians’ lives in the budget bill for the next Iranian calendar year.

In a press conference to unveil the budget bill to reporters, Nobakht said the government had put a huge amount of energy into developing a “just and transparent bill”.

According to Nobakht, the next year’s budget is 12% more than the budget for the current Iranian year (21 March 2018-2019), adding that it would envisage a total spending of around 433 quadrillion rials ($103 billion) from various sources including taxes, divesting state-run shares and selling oil.

Meanwhile, the budget bill expects 27 percent dependence on oil revenues and forecasts 1.5 million barrels of oil sales per day at the price of $54 per barrel. It also requires the government to allocate $14 billion (at the exchange rate of 42,000 rials) to supply of basic goods to back Iranians’ livelihood amid the US unilateral sanctions. To this end, it also mandates the allocation of 1.42 quadrillion rials for paying subsidies whether in cash or in form of basic goods to qualified Iranians.

Deputy of Iran’s Budget and Planning Organization Hamid Poormohammadi who accompanied Nobakht in the conference said for his part that the bill was mainly focused on Iranian’s livelihood, domestic production, and supporting environment and improvement of science in the country, as well.

A week before that, Nobakht had said the developers of the bill had had in mind some major points including reducing the pressure posed by US sanctions on Iranians’ lives, supplying basic goods, and paying a specific attention to domestic production and job creation.

Early in November, Governor of Central Bank of Iran (CBI) Abdolnasser Hemmati said that the US has failed in its efforts to cut Iran’s oil revenues to zero with sweeping sanctions, while the country is ready