The WSJ agrees with yours truly on one thing: "Mr. Ahmadinejad is
emerging as an Iranian version of Venezuela's Hugo Chavez" (Bill
Spindle, "Burning Oil -- Behind Rise of Iran's President: A Populist
Economic Agenda; Ahmadinejad Wins Power Promising Lavish Outlays;
Inflation Is a Major Worry; Crunch Time at Biscuit Factory," Wall
Street Journal, Eastern ed., 22 June 2006, A.1) . . . except, of
course, the WSJ, as well as Iranian neoliberals, doesn't like the
fiscal and monetary policies of the Ahmadinejad administration:

<blockquote>In recent weeks, he has proposed a $4 billion national
school- renovation program and has raised not only salaries for
workers in Iran's vast, government-controlled industrial sector but
also the minimum wage for everyone else. He doubled government grants
for newlyweds and forced banks to lower interest rates by several
percentage points.

Mr. Ahmadinejad is emerging as an Iranian version of Venezuela's Hugo
Chavez: a pugnacious politician, buoyed by oil money, whose anti-
elite message and defiance of the West is causing his popularity to
soar. Mr. Ahmadinejad isn't nearly as powerful as Iran's Supreme
Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. But his policies, which interrupt
Iran's tentative stabs at economic liberalization, have helped him
wield more influence than many thought possible for an Iranian
president.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

In the late 1990s, under a series of reform-minded governments, Iran
tried to emerge from the economic and political isolation that
followed the Islamic revolution and eight years of war with Iraq. In
2001, the government adopted a 20-year plan to boost imports and
exports by lowering trade barriers. The ultimate goal was to join the
World Trade Organization.

One key to that plan was diversifying an economy heavily dependent on
oil revenues. That means implementing a long list of free-market
recommendations, including freeing up labor markets and phasing out
subsidies.

Mr. Ahmadinejad's policies are rapidly reversing that tentative
economic liberalization. In addition to his spending plans, his
government has spurned foreign investment and recently raised tariffs
on mobile-phone handsets by 60%. Another plan: doling out shares -- he
calls them "Justice Shares" -- of government-controlled companies to
the poor.

In Ghavart, a conservative, working-class town of 9,000 near the Jey
industrial center, Mr. Ahmadinejad's pay raises and subsidies have
provided relief -- for some. Hamid Kachoui, a grocer, says he's
noticed customers buying extra chicken or meat recently.

"It's much better. People don't have to scrape by," said Mr. Kachoui,
18 years old, standing by a storefront stall packed with rice, bread
and other staples. Many food basics are heavily subsidized by Iran's
government, using oil money to bridge the gap with international
market prices.

Mr. Kachoui credits the improvement to Mr. Ahmadinejad, whom he says
nearly everyone in the village supported in last year's election.
"With President Ahmadinejad, things will get much better," he says.

Down the road in Jey's industrial center, private biscuit maker
Esfahan Farkhondeh Co. has been thrown into a crisis. Last year, the
14-year-old company produced 6,500 tons of biscuits, the kind served
with tea and coffee at almost every social gathering in Iran. A few
months ago, new laws pushed up the minimum salary for most of the
industrial bakery's workers by nearly 50%. The others got 22% raises,
according to Mohammed Reza Vaez Shoushtari, an owner and manager.

Meanwhile, the government lowered subsidies on sugar and flour bought
by industrial bakers, a nod to Iran's designs on joining the WTO.
"Biscuits are not a necessity for people," says Mr. Shoushtari,
suggesting a reason why his industry was singled out. The government
left subsidies for retail consumers unchanged.

The decision pushed up the price of the two main ingredients in the
company's biscuits. The company's bank tightened loan requirements
after government-mandated interest-rate cuts and now won't extend
additional money to keep the company operating.

Pinched, the biscuit concern informed buyers it would raise prices by
15%. They immediately cancelled about 80% of their orders, Mr.
Shoushtari says. He figured most were delaying purchases to see if the
government will reverse its decision on the subsidies. Without the
ability to fire workers, he plans to wait, hoping the business climate
stabilizes.

"When the president changes, the country always becomes a bit chaotic," he says.

For the year that ended March, 2006, Iran is projected to have earned
about $49 billion selling oil and natural gas, more than double its
take of four years ago, primarily because of rising prices. Much of
the president's spending is coming from Iran's Oil Stabilization Fund,
which is supposed to pay for long-term infrastructure projects or to
buoy the country if oil revenues falter. Iran has dipped into the fund
almost every year to fill holes in the government budget. Last year,
it spent $7.7 billion from the fund, much of it for government
subsidies on basic products, from wheat to gasoline.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .


Few things appealed more to Iranian voters, especially the working
poor, than Mr. Ahmadinejad's promise to "put the oil revenue on the
dinner table of every Iranian." Since being elected, he's made
frequent trips to Iranian provinces -- political barnstorming
previously unheard of in Iran's aloof theocracy. He encourages
supporters to write with their requests and has promised funds for
thousands of local projects.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Indeed, Mr. Ahmadinejad's standing among the poor and working class
has allowed him to challenge domestic foes, including many in the
clerical establishment, throwing Iran's political establishment off
balance in ways few expected. With 17-hour workdays and a reputation
for rectitude, Mr. Ahmadinejad has refashioned a post with few formal
powers. The parliament, more representative of Iran's conservative
establishment, has tried to parry Mr. Ahmadinejad's activism,
rejecting three of his candidates for oil minister as well as nominees
for other important economic portfolios.

But he's stunned Tehran's political elite by winning many battles. He
has replaced several senior clergymen in the Ministry of Culture with
non-clerical allies, apparently with the blessing of the Ayatollah
Khamenei, a senior cleric himself. While less important than the
Supreme Leader, Iran's president holds considerable influence over
economic and social policies through his ability to nominate the heads
of government ministries. He also appoints the head of the central
bank.

To outsiders trying to penetrate Iran's opaque political system, it's
still unclear whether the president remains under the control of the
clerical establishment or whether this is a genuine bid for power.

"Everybody's too busy just trying to catch up with him," says Nasser
Hadian, a political science professor at Tehran University and
childhood schoolmate of Mr. Ahmadinejad. Although he disagrees with
many of the president's policies, he grudgingly admires the way he has
shaken up Iran's political culture. "He's challenging the entire
spectrum of society, from the super-secular to the
super-religious."</blockquote>

--
Yoshie
<http://montages.blogspot.com/>
<http://mrzine.org>
<http://monthlyreview.org/>

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