19 Jan,26
by Kamran Noori

The current
demonstrations in Tehran and other major cities mark a significant shift in
Iran’s protest landscape. While previous unrest often centered on civil rights,
the current mobilization is deeply rooted in a rapidly declining standard of
living. To understand this instability, it is important to look at the
structure of Iran’s subsidy mechanism, the corruption factor, international
sanctions, contracting economy, and environmental factors that have turned everyday
life into a constant financial battle for many Iranians.
Internal Structural
Failures and Mismanagement
From an
economic perspective, Iran’s current instability reflects a classic case of
rent-seeking behavior. Public Choice theory suggests that when the state
creates artificial price distortions, it incentivizes politically connected
actors to capture economic rents rather than invest in productive activity.
Over time, this erodes institutional capacity, deepens inequality, and leaves
the broader population exposed to inflation and external shocks.
This dynamic is
clearly reflected in Iran’s domestic economic structure. The subsidized
multi-tiered exchange rate system has facilitated rent-seeking by certain
entities, allowing them to capture wealth while ordinary citizens bear the
cost. The adverse effects of internal structural failure have been compounded
by a five-year-long drought, which has diminished agricultural production and
increased the nation's reliance on expensive imports. These domestic failures
have not only pushed prices higher but have weakened the government’s capacity
to protect the population from external shocks.
External Shocks
and Financial Isolation
The crisis
reached a tipping point in late 2025. The invocation of the UN Snapback
mechanism in September 2025 reactivated six Security Council resolutions,
effectively re-imposing a global blockade on Iran's financial system.
Further
complicating the supply chain was the June 2025 conflict with Israel, which
damaged domestic fuel depots and energy infrastructure. This was followed by
the departure of the Savola Group, the largest Saudi investor in Iran, which
formerly controlled over 50% of the cooking oil market. Their exit, which liquidated
$188 million in assets, shattered the domestic edible oil supply chain, leading
to the current 1.8 million toman price tag for basic staples.
Macroeconomic
Contraction
These measures of pressure have forced the Iranian economy into a state of extended contraction. Between 2010 and 2025, Iran’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) fell from approximately $600 billion to an estimated $356 billion. While oil exports continue to play a crucial role in the economy, Iran has not been able to sell up to its potential, and ambitious plans to increase output remain unrealistic without foreign investment. Consequently, the World Bank’s previous forecast for slight growth in 2025 has reversed; the economy is now expected to contract even further in 2026.
Currency
Collapse and Hyper-Inflation
The culmination
of these factors is the collapse of the national currency. As suggested by
structuralist inflation dynamics, the Iranian rial has lost nearly half its
value over the past year, falling from 0.79 million per dollar in January 2025
to nearly 1.5 million in early January 2026. This depreciation has driven inflation
to approximately 43 percent, one of the highest rates in the world. With
foreign reserves depleted and import channels restricted, rising import costs
are passed directly to households, whose purchasing power has been severely
eroded.
Conclusion: The
Road Ahead
In response to
the current protests, the government has appointed a new central bank governor,
promised to end subsidies for the corrupt multiple exchange rate system, and
offered more subsidies for basic food and non-food items. However, with a
contracting economy and ongoing geopolitical tensions, the road to stability is
narrow. For the Iranian people, the primary challenge is now the sheer struggle
for survival in an increasingly unstable financial environment.
