Zürcher Nachrichten - Routine returns but Iranians struggle to afford daily life

EUR -
AED 4.185803
AFN 74.085133
ALL 93.826362
AMD 418.802971
ANG 2.040465
AOA 1045.169421
ARS 1695.421104
AUD 1.645212
AWG 2.051586
AZN 1.934209
BAM 1.956341
BBD 2.303346
BDT 140.958986
BGN 1.955393
BHD 0.431221
BIF 3402.355945
BMD 1.13977
BND 1.476315
BOB 7.891579
BRL 5.823315
BSD 1.143621
BTN 108.941786
BWP 15.467278
BYN 3.268917
BYR 22339.496633
BZD 2.300045
CAD 1.61404
CDF 2573.600964
CHF 0.923453
CLF 0.026852
CLP 1056.80635
CNY 7.724165
CNH 7.737849
COP 3698.383452
CRC 520.246171
CUC 1.13977
CUP 30.203911
CVE 110.285343
CZK 24.269929
DJF 203.648284
DKK 7.47491
DOP 67.158869
DZD 151.830061
EGP 56.933694
ERN 17.096554
ETB 183.45393
FJD 2.548751
FKP 0.851021
GBP 0.85187
GEL 3.014676
GGP 0.851021
GHS 13.111339
GIP 0.851021
GMD 83.769697
GNF 10030.7743
GTQ 8.726146
GYD 239.230919
HKD 8.934528
HNL 30.617199
HRK 7.532795
HTG 149.672709
HUF 357.288388
IDR 20681.130939
ILS 3.448907
IMP 0.851021
INR 109.152719
IQD 1498.214374
IRR 1566899.132656
ISK 143.394608
JEP 0.851021
JMD 180.698392
JOD 0.808054
JPY 185.004044
KES 147.315562
KGS 99.671539
KHR 4610.315565
KMF 492.380238
KPW 1025.79276
KRW 1718.511737
KWD 0.353021
KYD 0.953064
KZT 539.149117
LAK 25789.13273
LBP 102405.238401
LKR 383.69949
LRD 207.681063
LSL 18.62777
LTL 3.365445
LVL 0.689435
LYD 7.325058
MAD 10.683367
MDL 20.097795
MGA 4903.399198
MKD 61.585572
MMK 2393.005785
MNT 4085.405376
MOP 9.234454
MRU 45.563802
MUR 53.86616
MVR 17.609787
MWK 1983.165902
MXN 19.978354
MYR 4.649351
MZN 72.8024
NAD 18.627852
NGN 1574.774895
NIO 42.081639
NOK 11.148697
NPR 174.312976
NZD 1.980812
OMR 0.438226
PAB 1.143521
PEN 3.885075
PGK 5.10539
PHP 70.241194
PKR 317.908521
PLN 4.333788
PYG 6952.648454
QAR 4.169225
RON 5.233031
RSD 117.348448
RUB 87.479302
RWF 1680.079415
SAR 4.285153
SBD 9.173535
SCR 16.840457
SDG 684.433216
SEK 11.054227
SGD 1.475399
SHP 0.850954
SLE 27.753429
SLL 23900.411415
SOS 653.580767
SRD 42.867323
STD 23590.942706
STN 24.506671
SVC 10.006768
SYP 125.981195
SZL 18.625151
THB 38.065476
TJS 10.584249
TMT 3.989196
TND 3.380431
TOP 2.744293
TRY 53.571423
TTD 7.770217
TWD 36.57537
TZS 3003.292299
UAH 50.878818
UGX 4208.071563
USD 1.13977
UYU 46.112754
UZS 13812.820335
VES 807.876438
VND 29937.774914
VUV 136.752182
WST 3.146795
XAF 656.144232
XAG 0.019683
XAU 0.000281
XCD 3.080287
XCG 2.06117
XDR 0.816033
XOF 656.141353
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.211022
ZAR 18.689525
ZMK 10259.300045
ZMW 20.613887
ZWL 367.005551
  • RBGPF

    0.3500

    67.35

    +0.52%

  • BCC

    3.8200

    76.06

    +5.02%

  • CMSD

    0.0700

    22.38

    +0.31%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    13.01

    -0.15%

  • GSK

    0.3100

    52.78

    +0.59%

  • AZN

    -6.8800

    171.61

    -4.01%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    21.38

    +0.28%

  • CMSC

    0.0650

    22.085

    +0.29%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    82.59

    +0.33%

  • RIO

    1.0500

    90.54

    +1.16%

  • RELX

    0.3700

    32.44

    +1.14%

  • RYCEF

    0.3800

    19.46

    +1.95%

  • BTI

    -0.0151

    60.02

    -0.03%

  • VOD

    1.6400

    14.72

    +11.14%

  • BP

    0.6500

    39.2

    +1.66%

Routine returns but Iranians struggle to afford daily life
Routine returns but Iranians struggle to afford daily life / Photo: ATTA KENARE - AFP

Routine returns but Iranians struggle to afford daily life

Gyms and cafes have reopened in Tehran as life returns to a familiar rhythm under a ceasefire following weeks of US-Israeli airstrikes, but for IT worker Mayhar such everyday amenities are out of reach as financial pressures mount.

Text size:

Trendy cafes in affluent northern Tehran were busy on Wednesday night, the start of Iran's weekend, with men and women sipping colourful drinks and strolling the streets.

But the sense of normalcy belies the economic pains weighing on many Iranians in the capital and beyond, as Tehran and Washington face off with market-rattling blockades.

"For many people, paying rent and even buying food has become difficult, and some have nothing left at all," 28-year-old Mahyar told an AFP reporter based outside Iran, saying the company he worked for had laid off 34 people -- nearly 40 percent of its staff.

Salaries hadn't been increased either, Mahyar said, and inflation, already over 45 percent before the war, reached 53.7 percent in recent weeks, according to the national statistics centre.

"Only those who had real estate, large businesses and significant wealth still have a normal situation," he said.

The Iranian rial plummeted to a record low against the dollar on Wednesday, according to currency-tracking websites, trading at around 1.8 million on the black market, compared to 1.7 million at the time the war erupted.

Iran's deputy labour minister said that 191,000 people had filed for unemployment after losing their jobs due to the impacts of the war.

- 'Increasing every day' -

But 49-year-old Tonekabon said "even wealthy people are complaining", as tenants -- including his own -- struggle to pay rent.

"Everyone is repairing what they have or buying second-hand instead," he said.

Prices have been steadily rising, making paying for basic necessities a challenge, with anything but immediate needs put off.

The minimum daily wage in Iran is roughly 5.5 million rials ($3 on Thursday, according to currency-tracking websites), said a labour authority announcement carried by state media on April 20.

But as of April 28, less than a litre of cooking oil cost around four million rials and eggs were 240,000 each, with meat costing from seven to 23 million rials per kilogramme.

"Even during wartime, prices didn't rise this much, they're increasing every day," said Fatemeh, a 29-year-old in the southeastern Iranian city of Zahedan.

The mother-of-two said she works all day sewing clothes and embroidering but she can't afford baby formula for her youngest.

With her husband unemployed, she says she has been putting off medical care for a painful tooth for three months because she can't afford it or find anyone to lend her the money.

"It's not just us, many of our relatives and neighbours don't go for medical treatment because it has become so expensive."

Student Shahin Nampoor was fed up with mounting costs and varying prices, not to mention the current impasse in bringing the war to a definitive end.

"Either there should be an agreement, or a war," he told AFP journalists in Tehran.

- 'Despite it all' -

Iran's sanctions-hit economy was already struggling before Israel and the United States launched the war on February 28, and the conflict has only ratcheted up the pressure.

Iran recently banned steel exports after Israeli-US airstrikes targeted its plants, as well as civilian infrastructure including roads, bridges and petrochemical facilities.

The Islamic republic has been inflicting global economic pain by choking off vital trade through the Strait of Hormuz, but its own ports have been blockaded by Washington to try to pressure it into a deal on its nuclear programme.

Some Iranians have expressed worry the standoff could explode into fighting again, but for many their focus is on getting by each day.

Some said they couldn't find work, while others saw their income dry up after the authorities restricted the internet when the war started, suffocating industries and workers that relied on connecting to the global web.

There has been little indication that protests might break out as they did in late December, sparked by economic pains and quickly expanding into mass anti-government rallies met by a violent crackdown that rights groups say killed thousands.

Shervin, a photographer, lost his online work and for the first time was late paying rent recently.

He said he can't afford his music streaming platform subscription anymore, but is going to parks and cafes for some normalcy, like the families who set out in paddleboats on a lake in Tehran on Wednesday or cycled through one of the city's leafy parks.

"I am trying to see the beauty in life and to keep going despite it all," said Shervin.

burs-sw/smw

X.Blaser--NZN