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Iran’s economic crisis deepens as Rouhani prepares to take office. August 2, 2013. At a June 17 news conference in Tehran, Iranian President-elect Hasan Rouhani criticized the outgoing ...
Dimming economic growth. Iran’s economy has already been struggling under crippling Western sanctions and while the economic impact of the power crisis is “significant”, it grows more severe ...
Iran’s economic output other than oil has managed to grow slightly in recent years. On recent visits to several cities, restaurants and hotels still had some guests, and bazaars and sweet shops ...
As Iranians face economic turmoil, political disappointment and severe drought, people are heading to the streets to make their voices heard—but is the regime itself under threat?
It shows that the punitive economic measures imposed on Iran since 2012 — because of its controversial nuclear program, in an effort to increase economic and political pressure on Tehran— have ...
Iran’s currency fell by more than 18 percent against the dollar on Monday and another 8 percent on Tuesday, marking a new low in Iran’s continuing economic crisis.
Iran’s president has blamed the United States for the country’s economic difficulties, which he said included the biggest pressures and sanctions in 40 years.
Iran has called past rounds of sanctions “economic terrorism,” and “economic warfare” by the US ever since Trump pulled out of the nuclear deal with Iran, known as the Joint Comprehensive ...
Iran's presidential candidates on June 5 traded accusations over the country's economic crisis during their first debate ahead of the June 18 election.
A series of economic and international crises has Iran’s ruling regime in trouble with an angry population — giving the new US president a chance to end Tehran’s menace for good.
Prior to the 1979 revolution, Iran's population of 34 million people relied on a stable water supply, sourced from millennia-old underground canals and aquifers. The Iranian revolution changed all ...