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Iran's new budget to resist US sanctions

By JONATHAN POWELL in London | China Daily | Updated: 2019-12-10 10:45
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Iran's President Hassan Rouhani submits documents presenting Iran's new budget for the financial year to Parliament Speaker Ali Larijani in Teheran on Sunday. Rouhani described it as a "budget of resistance" against the sanctions. ANADOLU AGENCY/GETTY IMAGES

TEHERAN-Iran's president said on Sunday his country will depend less on oil revenue next year, as he unveiled a budget designed to resist the crippling US trade embargo.

Iran is in the grip of an economic crisis. The US reimposed sanctions that block Iran from selling its crude oil abroad, following President Donald Trump's decision last year to withdraw from Teheran's 2015 nuclear deal with world powers.

"The budget sends a message to the world that despite the sanctions, we will manage the country," President Hassan Rouhani told the opening session of Parliament.

The proposed budget will counter "maximum pressure and sanctions" by the United States, he said.

Iranian media, including the semiofficial Tasnim news agency, said that the submitted budget would raise taxes, sell some government-owned property and issue more government bonds. But it wasn't immediately clear from Rouhani's speech whether these proposed measures would fully compensate for plummeting oil revenues.

Rouhani added that Iran will also benefit from a $5 billion loan from Russia that's being finalized.

He said the US and Israel will remain "hopeless" despite their goal of weakening Iran through sanctions.

The budget aimed at giving more relief and "removing difficulties" for poor people by heavily subsiding food and medical needs, he stated.

The next Iranian fiscal year begins March 20, with the advent of the Persian New Year. The budget is set to be about $40 billion, nearly 10 percent higher than in 2019. The increase comes as the country is suffering from a 40 percent inflation rate.

Parliament has until early February to discuss the budget bill. The Guardian Council, a constitutional watchdog, must approve the bill for it to become law.

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