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WEEKLY NEWSLETTER
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Iran
Index
Before 1979 Iran had relied on the industrial West for trade.
Little changed in subsequent years except rhetoric. Although the
government purportedly sought to develop trade relations with other
Islamic countries, figures showed that in 1985 approximately 64
percent of Iran's imports came from the West, 28 percent from
developing countries, and 8 percent from Eastern Europe. These
figures, although representing an absolute increase in trade with
Third World countries, actually indicated only a small percentage
increase in total trade. Economic necessity mandated that Iran
trade with whatever country was willing, notwithstanding policy
pronouncements regarding self-sufficiency and Third World
communities of interest. Nearly all foreign trade occurred through
government-controlled purchasing and distribution companies, which
were charged with enforcing government trade policies and
regulating the quantity and quality of imports.
Despite trade sanctions applied in 1980 by the United States,
the European Economic Community, and Japan, Iranian imports from
the West actually increased 13.5 percent from FY 1980 to FY 1981.
West Germany remained Iran's primary supplier in 1985, followed by
Japan, Britain, Italy, and Turkey (see
table 7, Appendix).
As a result of United States trade restrictions following the
Tehran embassy takeover in 1979, imports from the United States
dropped dramatically. This lost market, coupled with the decline in
oil revenues, forced the government to consider bartering Iranian
oil for non-oil goods. It was estimated that total trade with new
Islamic and Third World trade partners would increase from 20
percent in the mid-1980s to 35 percent in 1987 through barter.
Barter agreements became commonplace in 1984 to compensate for
the fall in revenue from oil exports
(see Balance of Payments)
, this
ch. These revenues were 15 percent less than expected in FY 1984
(US$17,000 billion), with barter arrangements making up the
difference. About one-quarter of 1984 oil exports resulted from
barter or bilateral trade agreements. Barter became a point of
contention between the Ministry of Oil, which opposed it, and the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which supported barter as a key
element of foreign policy. Bartering ceased in late 1985 as a
result of disagreement between the ministries but resumed in 1986
because of economic necessity occasioned by depressed oil prices.
Bartering with other countries, especially in Eastern Europe,
mitigated the effects of the economy's structural problems but
failed to solve them.
The United States resumed trade with Iran in FY 1981, with
direct sales totaling US$300 million. United States exports to Iran
fell to less than half that amount, however, in FY 1982. This led
to Iran's renewal of the Regional Cooperation for Development pact
with Pakistan and Turkey in October 1984, which by 1985 had greatly
increased trade among these partners. By early 1987, trade among
the three countries was worth over US$3 billion, as compared with
US$100 million before the Revolution.
In 1986 the United States imported US$612 million worth of
Iranian products, principally crude oil, caviar, rugs, furs,
spices, and gems. Of those imports, crude oil represented US$508.8
million, pistachios and other nuts US$15 million, carpets US$5.5
million, and caviar about US$2 million. In the first five months of
1987, the United States imported US$418.5 million in Iranian goods.
The increase was probably caused by fluctuations in petroleum spot
prices and in the demand for oil in general.
In 1986 Iran acknowledged the role of the Soviet Union as a
major future trade partner by announcing its plans to complete the
electrification of the railroad between Tabriz and the Soviet city
of Jolfa. Moreover, the construction of railroad lines--to be
completed by 1989--linking other points in Iran with the Soviet
Union and with Pakistan indicated the growing Iranian intent to
deal with both countries as trade partners
(see Transportation and Telecommunications
, this ch.). In August 1987, Iran and the Soviet
Union agreed to large-scale joint economic projects, including oil
pipelines and a railroad to the Gulf. Despite the apparent
intention on both sides to do business, overall Iranian-Soviet
trade in FY 1986 was one-quarter that in FY 1985.
Data as of December 1987
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