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       buyers except for 20% in each case, except where otherwise stated. However, it will be an uphill struggle to sell majority stakes in so many businesses, with Pouri-Hosseini noting that across six months of the previous calendar year, only 55 companies were privatised.
“If we can privatise double or triple this amount, still there would be many companies for sale,” he added.
 6.2 ​Debt
 Iran - Gross external debt 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018
 External debt (USD bn)
20.030 17.344 7.406 7.006 5.441 6.322 7.475 8.481 10.910
 External debt (% GDP)
4.281 2.929 1.258 1.366 1.277 1.577 1.9 2.0 2.4
 Source: World Bank, CEIC
    Iran’s total external debt at $9.33bn in March 2019
   Iran's total external debt decreased 17% to $9.33bn at the end of the previous Persian financial year (ended March 20), according to the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) and IBENA on July 8.
Despite suffering from bad debt internally, Iran is in a remarkably strong position in terms of its international debt, most notably down to international lenders not being allowed to interact formally with the Islamic Republic.
The central bank report shows that Iran's external debt reached $9.339bn at the end of the Iranian fiscal year ending March 2019. In comparison, Turkey’s external debt reached $286.2bn at the end of 2018, according to its central bank, ​Hurriyet ​reported.
Iran’s short-term external debt totalled $7.18bn at the end of March this year and $2.15bn is mid-term and long-term debts.
The central bank report then switches to euros saying, “Iran’s potential commitment was placed at €8.23bn of which €6.33bn belongs to mid-term and long-term debts and €1.86bn belongs to short term debts”.
“At end of March 2019, Iran’s external debt was placed at $9.3bn, recording a decrease of $0.4 billion over its level at end-February 2019." the CBI said. The CBI added, "At the end of March 2018, Iran’s external debt was placed at $11.3bn, recording a decrease of $2bn over its level during Iran’s fiscal year.”
 7.0​ FX
Forex and gold prices skyrocket in Iran
Dollar, euro and sterling prices on May 13 skyrocketed on Iran’s so-called tertiary street rate or “free” market.
The sudden increases arrived with the secondary Forex Management Integrated System (NIMA) rate that is compulsory for exporters closing in on
   Iran - FX
  Jun-18
     Sep-18
   Dec-18
 Mar-19
  Jun-19
     Sep-19
   Dec-19
 Feb-20
    May-20
   Currency (units per EUR) (eop)
   49,268
      48,754
    48,011
 47,165
   47,754
      45,926
    47,055
 46,543
     45,835
 Currency (units per USD) (eop)
  42,590
  42,000
    41,995
   42,000
   42,000
  42,000
    42,000
   42,000
   42,000
  29​ IRAN Country Report June 2020 www.intellinews.com
















































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