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Business / Middle East Business

Iran unveils budget based on lower oil price of $70/barrel

Published: 08 Dec 2014 - 03:21 am | Last Updated: 19 Jan 2022 - 01:11 am

Iranian parliament members arrive before President Hassan Rouhani presented the budget in Tehran yesterday.

TEHRAN: Iran unveiled a draft budget yesterday for next year based on oil prices remaining around $70 per barrel, with President Hassan Rouhani saying the country would become less dependent on crude.
With international prices at five-year lows on the back of oversupply worries and a stronger dollar, major oil producers are having to juggle their finances to compensate for lower than expected revenues.
Rouhani admitted the budget for the fiscal year starting in March 2015 “would be under pressure” given the big fall in oil prices in recent months, from above $100 to less than $70.
“Such a drop is unprecedented,” he said in a speech to parliament carried live on state television, noting that the government had been cautious in its forecasts. “In the short term, we will have a decrease in our revenues. Our economy must move towards non-oil exports. The oil price drop is a new opportunity to accelerate this.”
Iran has the world’s fourth largest proven oil reserves and currently exports around 1.3 million barrels per day.
However, Rouhani said oil revenues earmarked for the budget would be $24bn next year, down from $27.5bn, meaning less than half the government’s income would come from exported crude.
Iran had already announced some tax rise plans on the back of the recent oil price fall, along with increases in non-oil exports.
Next year’s non-oil-based revenues will constitute more than half the government’s total income, rising to 53 percent from the current 47 percent, according to forecasts. Total spending will rise 8.5 percent.
Rouhani did not state a figure for the price of oil per barrel laid down in the budget, but the official IRNA news agency said it was fixed at $72 — down from around $100 in the current budget year.
Other changes have also been necessary. Money from oil sales put into the National Development Fund used to finance major infrastructure projects will drop from 31 percent to 20 percent “to avoid too much pressure on the budget”, Rouhani said. AFP

Defence expenditure to increase by 33.5pc

DUBAI: President Hassan Rouhani will hike military spending by more than a third in the next fiscal year despite presenting a “cautious, tight” budget in response to falling oil prices and punishing sanctions. Rouhani proposed a general budget of 8,400 trillion rials.
Defence expenditure will rise 33.5 percent to about 282 trillion rials, most of which will be assigned to the elite Revolutionary Guards. The Guards’ budget will increase by about half to 174 trillion rials. Iran is stockpiling rockets, missiles and other conventional weapons. Reuters