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View Full Version : Iran's experiment with Reaganomics



Die Neue Zeit
24th December 2010, 00:45
http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/12/23/dabashi.iran.subsidies/



By Hamid Dabashi

Within hours of speaking with the BBC and Voice of America, both in Persian, Fariborz Raisdana, a leading Iranian economist, was arrested by the security forces of the Islamic Republic.

On both these occasions, Raisdana was severely critical of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's program of substantially cutting governmental subsidies, in what amounts to "the biggest surgery" to the Iranian economy in 50 years.

Initiated on Sunday, the government's actions introduced a four-fold rise in the price of gasoline and seriously cut government food subsidies, including, literally, people's daily bread.

The current 20% inflation rate, some economies believe, will in fact increase after these new "austerity measures." Even economists sympathetic to Ahmadinejad's policies warn of higher inflation and characterize his claim of "zero inflation" as disingenuous.

A much milder version of a hike in the gasoline price resulted in widespread riots and the burning down of gas stations by protesters back in 2007, only two years into Ahmadinejad's presidency. This time around Ahmadinejad anticipated possible protests by "flooding Iran's capital" with the militarized security forces, in a move similar to the government's response to the opposition Green Movement.

The U.S.-led and U.N.-imposed sanctions against Iran, aimed at stopping its nuclear program and supported by those wishing for "regime change," obviously played a major role in increasing the pressure for cutting government spending.

But among Raisdana's comments to BBC and VOA was the fact that such cuts in governmental subsidies and a turn to neoliberal economics was a policy favored by the last two presidents of Iran, who have also been (to varied degrees) supporters of the Green Movement -- Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani and Mohammad Khatami.

This creates a major rift within the opposition camp of the Green Movement. Its leadership, particularly Khatami, now needs to decide where they stand -- they can no longer oppose Ahmadinejad for a program they were championing for decades -- but did not have the political will and/or military wherewithal to implement.

By taking these steps and introducing a form of Reaganomics to Iran, Ahmadinejad is exposing his own hypocrisy. He can no longer pose as the populist champion of the poor fighting against the presumably more affluent members of the Green Movement. He has also exposed as a fraud his global posturing as an anti-capitalist champion.

Some 7 million Iranian laborers, and their families -- with their union leaders like Mansur Osanlou suffering in the dungeons of the Islamic Republic -- are set to suffer the consequences of these cuts in subsidies.

Ahmadinejad's neoliberal economics share another thing with President Ronald Reagan's policies. The Iranian president is pushing an increase in military spending. That buildup is first and foremost prompted by the military threat that the U.S. and its regional allies have posed to the Islamic Republic for at least the last decade.

Such spending also supports the heavily militarized security apparatus of Ahmadinejad's regime. It helps employ less-well-off Iranians, making them beholden to the regime and enhances the power of the "the military industrial complex" that now rules the country from the headquarters of its paramilitary revolutionary guards.

Be that as it may, these same measures also expose the banality of Ahmadinejad's alliance with such self-proclaimed champions of anti-capitalism as Evo Morales of Bolivia and Hugo Chavez of Venezuela. And it makes a mockery of what passes for "progressive anti-war activists" in the United States who fall head over toe trying to have dinner with Ahmadinejad when he visits New York, in support of his "anti-capitalist," and "anti-imperialist" positions.

Domestically, the move is a calculated risk for Ahmadinejad, because it will undoubtedly compromise his populist propaganda, if not his claim to a popular base. Still it may be a risk worth taking for Ahmadinejad, since it could weaken the opposition.

If this opposition wants a market-driven economy, here it is -- initiated by Ahmadinejad's government. The ball is now squarely in Mir Hossein Mousavi's court. The leader of the Green Movement must clearly and succinctly distinguish his economic philosophy from that of Ahmadinejad and his predecessors, and reach out on behalf of the most vulnerable social classes of the society as they struggle with huge cost increases.

gorillafuck
24th December 2010, 00:49
Now the "anti-imperialist" Ahmidinejad is the neoliberal, I suppose.

I'm not extremely surprised.

Rafiq
24th December 2010, 01:01
HA! Take that Marxist Leninists!

gorillafuck
24th December 2010, 01:11
HA! Take that Marxist Leninists!
In their defense, most ML's didn't support Ahmidinejad. Just most of the U.S. ones. Outside of the states they all opposed him.

A Revolutionary Tool
24th December 2010, 01:20
I never supported him, even when the PSL were(As the article puts it) trying to have dinner with him.

Rafiq
24th December 2010, 01:24
In their defense, most ML's didn't support Ahmidinejad. Just most of the U.S. ones. Outside of the states they all opposed him.

When I went to another site which most Revleft ML's attend, pretty much everyone supported Ahmadinejad.

RadioRaheem84
24th December 2010, 01:34
I never supported him, even when the PSL were(As the article puts it) trying to have dinner with him.

I personally was only supportive of Iran against imperialism, a change in leadership to a workers democracy as was intended by the revolution to drop to shah, should be supported overall.

Now Iran is back in the same boat before the shahs fall, only this time they have a far worse reactionary government.

Rafiq
24th December 2010, 01:53
The situation is confusing because you are dealt with "Wait, Anti Workers against Anti Workers?"

Just because Iran is anti American doesn't make it worth supporting.

I am growing suspicion of Ahmadinjad is a Fascist, he has a history of blatant anti communism, also, I remember he mentioned a third position from Capitalism and Socialism.

His holocaust revisionism, also points out a lot.

I honestly think he's a Fascist.

Chimurenga.
24th December 2010, 02:01
I never supported him, even when the PSL were(As the article puts it) trying to have dinner with him.

So where does it say PSL? It says "progressive anti-war activists". A bunch of different groups not relating to the PSL has met with him within the past few months. You're assuming things you have no idea about.

Everyone who supports Iran on an anti-Imperialist basis is already aware of him supporting Capitalism on some level. No one sees him as an "anti-Capitalist champion". This isn't and shouldn't be a shock nor a surprise.

However, anyone who actually sits down to read this article will find out that they are not embracing government cuts not entirely because they want more money for themselves, but as the article says, because of sanctions imposed by the US and the UN.


only this time they have a far worse reactionary government.

Worse than the Shah? You must be joking..

gorillafuck
24th December 2010, 02:07
Everyone who supports Iran on an anti-Imperialist basis is already aware of him supporting Capitalism on some level. No one sees him as an "anti-Capitalist champion". This isn't and shouldn't be a shock nor a surprise.
What does it mean to support Iran on an anti-imperialist basis? If you mean that you don't support sanctions against or an invasion of Iran then you hold the same position as every leftist.

Rafiq
24th December 2010, 02:08
Women DO have less rights under the Islamic Republic.

Gays DO have less rights too.

Also, Porn is banned :(

A Revolutionary Tool
24th December 2010, 02:34
So where does it say PSL? It says "progressive anti-war activists". A bunch of different groups not relating to the PSL has met with him within the past few months. You're assuming things you have no idea about.It doesn't specifically name the PSL, but the PSL is part of the "progressive anti-war activist" camp are they not, and people from the party met with Ahmadinejad, did they not? There was a shitstorm on Revleft when they did, I remember people on here from the PSL arguing that it was okay. I'm not trying to shit on the PSL, I plan on becoming a member soon. I mentioned the PSL because Chapayev said "Ha ML's take that" and I just felt it should be known that I have never supported Ahmadinejad even when the party I plan on joining want to meet him in person and tell him he's such a good anti-imperialist.


Everyone who supports Iran on an anti-Imperialist basis is already aware of him supporting Capitalism on some level. No one sees him as an "anti-Capitalist champion". This isn't and shouldn't be a shock nor a surprise.
As Zeekloid already pointed out, I don't think anybody here thinks sanctions should be put on Iran or that we should go to war with Iran. But supporting Iran on an anti-imperialist basis against these savage attacks does not mean supporting Ahmadinejad.

However, anyone who actually sits down to read this article will find out that they are not embracing government cuts not entirely because they want more money for themselves, but as the article says, because of sanctions imposed by the US and the UN.So he treats a crisis like every capitalist country in the world is doing right? By cutting benefits for the poor? Isn't this the guy that said capitalism is evil?

Savage
24th December 2010, 03:26
What were Ahmidinejad's economic policies like prior to this?

Rafiq
24th December 2010, 03:55
Still very capitalist, just not as much power to the corporations

Nolan
24th December 2010, 19:23
HA! Take that Marxist Leninists!

You must be Moscow, troll, because you've got a red square.

Not surprising. This simply goes to show Iran isn't socialist by any stretch of the non-Glenn Beck imagination and should shut up the libertarian cave dwellers who've been calling it that since the "anti-capitalist" comments from Ahmadinejad.

RadioRaheem84
24th December 2010, 21:05
Worse than the Shah? You must be joking..


I know the Shah was worse before. What I am talking about is that most of the repression under the Shah was due to his White Revolution and modernization projects which neglected the poor.

Repression due to hastening free market reforms + repression because of views that mind offend the religious dogma imposed on the State = worse than the Shah.

So is this a move by the Iranian leaders to win favor from the West?

Jose Gracchus
24th December 2010, 22:04
I think this reflects the long-term evolution of the Iranian state to a humdrum authoritarian exploiters' state on the broadly Pinochetian model, divested of class distractions in the overly politically influential clerical and military strata. If Western reporting is to be believed, the clericocracy has been substantially supplanted by a regime based on the Revolutionary Guards, their leadership, and their political alumni (which includes Ahmidinejad). The RG complex has increasingly appropriated both private and state-managed economic sectors, and thus increasingly is in a position to behave directly and unapologetically as a state capitalist (in the original German sense, not a 'term designating the USSR as undesirable' sense) elite.

Devrim
24th December 2010, 23:16
Also, Porn is banned :(

In 1986 I was travelling to Tehran for a political meeting. The bus we were on was stopped and the revolutionary guards got everybody off and searched their luggage. Various pornographic items were found, i.e. the Turkish equivalents of 'Cosmopolitan'. The Pasdaran got everybody off the bus and burnt them whilst lecturing us on the evils of pornography in five languages.

:confused:

Devrim

Devrim
24th December 2010, 23:19
I just felt it should be known that I have never supported Ahmadinejad even when the party I plan on joining want to meet him in person and tell him he's such a good anti-imperialist.

I would take time and think about whether you really want to join a party whose politics you don't agree with. This is no a 'mistake' on a particular issue, but something that is central to their politics.


But supporting Iran on an anti-imperialist basis against these savage attacks does not mean supporting Ahmadinejad.

What does "supporting Iran on an anti-imperialist basis" mean? I guess it would be something that was unpalatable to virtually any Iranian socialist.

Devrim

A Revolutionary Tool
25th December 2010, 04:46
I would take time and think about whether you really want to join a party whose politics you don't agree with. This is no a 'mistake' on a particular issue, but something that is central to their politics.The only reason I haven't already officially joined is because I'm always thinking it might not be perfect. But which party is, I doubt there is a political party out there that I will agree with 100% on every issue. And if I do join the party but feel a different organization is fit for me, I can always up and leave.




What does "supporting Iran on an anti-imperialist basis" mean? I guess it would be something that was unpalatable to virtually any Iranian socialist.

Devrim
Well what really constitutes support? Is buying a t-shirt they sell support? How about marching in the streets? Take the situation in Palestine. You support the Palestinian struggle, but that doesn't mean you support Hamas, instead you support the PFLP. What does supporting the PFLP mean? Does waving a PFLP flag, selling their merchandise, and talking to people about how cool the PFLP are constitute supporting them.

KC
25th December 2010, 05:17
This is in fact very old news. During the election both Ahmedinejad and Mousavi supported the advancement of private capital in the country, their only differences were on how to implement that.

The idea that Mousavi was a "pro-western," pro-capital candidate while Ahmedinejad was an anti-imperialist supporter of the nationalized industries was a myth.

RadioRaheem84
25th December 2010, 06:50
Well how is the West going to feel about this?

Iran will open it's markets but will the US continue for be on the offensive?

KC
25th December 2010, 07:37
Of course they will, the issue at hand is not strictly economic but political as well.

28350
25th December 2010, 19:54
I never supported him, even when the PSL were(As the article puts it) trying to have dinner with him.

my friend calls him ah-my-dinner-jacket

Rafiq
27th December 2010, 04:39
Well how is the West going to feel about this?

Iran will open it's markets but will the US continue for be on the offensive?

I would assume that economically there isn't much of a problem between the US and it's allies regarding Iran, excluding all of those sanctions.

The problem is the political tension between them.

The Iranian government is not really politically 'Anti-Imperialist'.

They have called to meet with many Imperialists but were declined.

They do business with Imperialists in some situations, too.