You see a page from the old site of Iran International that is no longer updated. Visit iranintl.com to view the new site.

Desperate Officials Consider Barter To Supply Iran’s Needs 

Iran’s leaders have been weighing in plans for barter trade in a bid to ease the country’s foreign trade crisis, and to mitigate its difficulties in importing essential goods due to a lack of foreign currency.

Oil Minister Bijan Zanganeh took part in a meeting with Central Bank Governor Abdolnasser Hemmati and several other leading economic officials on Thursday October 22 to discuss options. Zanganeh said the approach had been given the go-ahead by President Hassan Rouhani.

While such a plan might resemble the kind of oil-for-food scheme used by the United Nations with, for example, Saddam Hussein’s Iraq, it would face the problem that Iran faces a sanctions regime – including the threat of third-party measures – imposed unilaterally by the US rather than agreed by the international community.

Hemmati told reporters in Tehran barter could help provide raw materials for Iran. He said a similar approach has been used elsewhere, although he gave no specific examples, and his statement contradicted past remarks by Iranian officials who had characterized barter as obsolete. 

Nevertheless, referring to the hardships Iran is undergoing because of sanctions, Hemmati said that barter trade might be able to ease some of Iran’s problems.  

Iran’s oil exports have fallen from around 2.6 million barrels a day in early 2018 to a few hundred thousand barrels as customers, mainly in Asia, fear punitive US action.  Even China, which still buys small amounts of oil from Iran, faces problems making payments. Last week Mohammad Reza Harirchi, the head of the Sino-Iranian Chamber of Commerce, said that Iran would sell at most $5 billion worth oil to China in 2020.

Vice-President Eshagh Jahangiri said in June that Iran’s oil revenue had dropped from $100 billion annually in the early 2010s to $8 billion in 2019. President Hassan Rouhani, who generally presents an optimist view of the economy, said in late August that Iran’s oil revenue in 2018 was $20 billion. 

Speaking in Tehran on Thursday, Central Bank Governor Hemmati claimed that the plan for barter trade would bring about “a major development” in foreign trade in the remaining months of the current Iranian year, ending in March 2021. There has been a more upbeat mood recently in Tehran – with the rial rising against the dollar and against gold – as US opinion polls have shown President Donald Trump lagging behind his Democratic challenger Joe Biden.

Biden has promised to return to the 2015 nuclear deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), although there is discussion in Washington as to whether a Democrat administration would or should require further concessions from Tehran in return for easing sanctions.

 

Iran in Brief
City officials in Iran's capital Tehran are planning to put locks on large waste containers in the streets to prevent garbage pickers from accessing waste.More
The Biden Administration has confirmed to the US Congress that sanction imposed by its predecessor on Iran have drastically reduced Iran's trade with the world.More
The UK government said on Sept 20 that Britain would "not rest" until all its dual nationals being held in Iran were returned home.More
President Ebrahim Raisi’s vice president in women’s affairs has refused to support an age limit in child marriage, a controversial issue in Iran.More
In first news about detained Iranian dissident rap singer Toomaj, Iran International has learned that was arrested by the intelligence ministry.More