iranians’-demand-for-their-leaders:-fix-the-economy

Iranians’ Demand for Their Leaders: Fix the Economy

Middle East|Iranians’ Demand for Their Leaders: Fix the Economy

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/07/04/world/middleeast/iran-economy.html

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In a series of interviews, virtually every resident of Tehran listed Iran’s sickly economy as the No. 1 issue for the country’s next president.

In a workshop filled with ornate chairs, a man sits in one of them.
Abbas sells restored furniture in Tehran. “Iran is a rich country, but that wealth doesn’t go into the hands of the people,” he said.Credit…Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

By Alissa J. Rubin

Alissa J. Rubin spent nearly a week interviewing residents of Iran’s capital, Tehran, about how the stumbling economy is affecting their lives.

In the working-class neighborhood of Tehran surrounding Imam Hussein Square, the side streets and alleys are lined with secondhand stores and small repair shops for refurbishing all manner of household goods. But with little to do, most shopkeepers idle in front of their stores.

A 60-year-old man named Abbas and his son Asgar, 32, lounged in two of the secondhand, faux brocaded armchairs that they sell. Asked about their business, Abbas, who did not want his surname used for fear of drawing the government’s attention, looked incredulous.

“Just look down the street,” he said. “Business is awful. there are no customers, people are economically weak now, they don’t have money.”

After years of crippling U.S. sanctions that generated chronic inflation, made worse by Iran’s economic mismanagement and corruption, Iranians increasingly feel trapped in a downward economic spiral.

Virtually every person interviewed during six days of reporting in the Iranian capital described a pervasive sense of losing ground economically, of becoming window shoppers rather than buyers, of patching machinery used in factories because replacements are too expensive, of substituting lentils for lamb.

Image

Shops filled with goods and eager salespeople fill the Bazaar in Tehran’s Imam Hossein Square. What are missing are customers.Credit…Arash Khamooshi for The New York Times

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