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MENAFN - Arab Times - 26/03/2012

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(MENAFN - Arab Times) Tightened sanctions by the West have yet to dissuade Iran from pursuing its controversial nuclear programme but have triggered an oil price spike that could trigger a global recession.

Oil prices hit a record high in euro terms earlier this month and analysts now believe they may have already dragged the eurozone into recession.

New sanctions by the US and EU against Iran have ratcheted up tensions and the price of oil as traders worry about the risk of hostilities, including an attack by Israel on Iranian nuclear facilities.

US President Barack Obama conceded Friday that tensions over Iran were "adding a 20 or 30 premium to oil prices", which are up some 20 percent since December.

IMF chief Christine Lagarde warned earlier that any interruption in oil supplies from Iran could increase oil prices by a further 20 to 30 percent and cause an economic shock.

Consequences
"A sudden and brutal rise in the price of oil" from Brent crude's current levels of around 125 a barrel "would have serious consequences on the global economy" until other oil-exporting nations were able to bridge the gap, she added.

Iran has threatened retaliation against the sanctions, including a possible disruption of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, a Gulf chokepoint for global oil shipments.

Ernst & Young's Eurozone Forecast warned a spike in oil prices to a sustained level of 150 a barrel would cause a recession of 1.0 percent in the European Union this year, double the milder 0.5 percent contraction currently forecast.

"A new oil shock would hit an already fragile economy," said Marie Diron, senior economic adviser to the Ernst & Young Eurozone Forecast.
"With their budgets already squeezed by austerity measures and rising unemployment, many households" would likely be forced to cut back on purchases.

That would be a blow to businesses, which would also have to cope with higher fuel prices and would likely cut output and jobs, increasing the number of unemployed by around 500,000 according their calculations.

Industry group IATA warned that current fuel prices were hurting airlines and that an increase to 150 a barrel could push some into bankruptcy.
The price of Brent crude jumped in January when the EU said it would ban imports of Iranian crude and higher prices appear to have already pushed the eurozone back into recession.

Eurozone private sector activity fell more sharply than expected in March, indicating that the 17-nation single currency area slid back into recession, according to Markit research firm's purchasing managers' index (PMI).

The composite PMI fell to 48.7 points in March after reaching 49.3 points in February. Any score below 50 indicates contraction. "The oil price and the weak trade environment were key drivers behind the fall," said Christian Schulz, senior economist at Berenberg Bank.

Chinese manufacturing activity also fell to a four-month low of 48.1 in March, according HSBC bank's preliminary Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI), adding to concerns about slowing growth in the world's second largest economy.
The price of Brent crude hit 128.40 on March 1, the highest level since a peak of 147.50 of July 2008. But with the euro having slid against the dollar, it reached a record of 94.65 euros per barrel.

"Given the existing major debt issues facing beleaguered eurozone economies, the latest jump in oil prices adds unwelcome inflationary and balance of payments costs with imports of dollar-denominated oil," the International Energy Agency commented in its latest monthly report.


"Sustained higher prices risk further undermining the pace of global economic recovery," the agency added, while noting that prices have risen by 20 percent since December.

The IEA estimates that exports from Iran could plunge by about 800,000 barrels per day to one million bpd in the second half of the year after the tighter Western sanctions go into force.

The high oil prices have clearly become a worry to Western governments.
French energy minister Eric Besson said this past week that France and other industrialised countries were considering releasing part of their strategic crude reserves to keep prices down.

The previous week Obama discussed such a possibility with visiting British Prime Minister David Cameron, the White House had confirmed.

Industrialised nations had dipped into strategic reserves last year to mitigate a rise in prices after Libyan exports dried up due to the rebellion against longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi.

However IEA director Maria van Hoeven told Dow Jones Newswires this past week there has been no discussion of any coordinated release of reserves by industrialised countries, which is handled via the agency.
She added there is not currently any supply disruption that would justify a release.

Washington and Brussels believe the sanctions are beginning to take a toll on the Iranian economy, and Tehran last month agreed to revive talks between it and the P51 group of powers - the five UN Security Council permanent members plus Germany.

As yet no date or venue for the negotiations has been announced, and the previous round of Iran-P51 talks collapsed in Istanbul in January last year.

Iranian officials have said they plan to make no concessions on their nuclear programme.

Elsewhere, Iraq's oil ministry says oil exports in January have declined by nearly 4.5 percent compared to the previous month.

Sunday's statement says last month's oil exports averaged 2.0137 million barrels per day, down from an average of 2.107 million barrels per day in January.

The sales grossed 6.595 billion based on an average price of 112.928 per barrel. January's sales were based on an average price of 109.081 per barrel and yielded 7.061 billion.

The oil was sold to 27 international oil companies.

Iraq relies on oil exports for 95 percent of its revenues, and the uncertainty in the market stemming from the conflict between the West and Iran over its controversial nuclear program has helped support global crude prices.

Also:
DUBAI: Iran is boosting the monthly cash payments it gives to its citizens by more than fifty percent, the Iranian Labour News Agency reported, as soaring inflation and the depreciating Rial continue to bite deep into the national economy.

The Iranian government implemented the first-stage of its Targeted Subsidies Plan towards the end of 2010 in an attempt wean the country off more generous food and fuel subsidies and so cut government spending. At the time, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called it the "biggest economic plan of the past 50 years".

After the additional payment, the vast majority of Iranians will receive 730,000 Rials (around 60 U.S. dollars) in direct monthly cash payments.
The increase will soon be deposited in recipients' accounts, the head of the organisation for targeted subsidies, Behrouz Moradi, was quoted as saying, but cannot be used until the second phase of the government's subsidies plans is launched.

The next stage is expected to be introduced in April with the goal of reducing payments from 90 percent to 80 percent of the population. It is unclear from the report if the additional amount will be paid on a monthly or fortnightly basis.

Critics of the plan have accused Ahmadinejad of embarking on a programme of wasteful public spending that has resulted in soaring inflation.
Food and fuel prices have spiralled since the reforms were introduced, causing deep financial problems for millions of people across the country. The price of gasoline has risen three-fold and the cost of gas has soared by 500 percent.

Last week Iran's most powerful authority, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, gave his full backing to the Targeted Subsidies Plan which he say was an important means of distributing subsidies in a more balanced way.

Last year, the International Monetary Fund commended the Iranian government for the policy which it said had led to a reduction in fuel consumption and inflationary pressure.

According to official figures, inflation has decreased to around 20 percent but critical MPs say the real figure is closer to 50 percent.

New measures imposed by the United States and its allies targeting Iran's financial and energy sectors have resulted in a dramatic devaluation of the Rial since the beginning of the year.

 






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