An Iranian lawmaker said on Tuesday that the reimposition of UN sanctions under the snapback mechanism has pushed consumer prices up by as much as 30% but argued that the impact could be contained through effective management.
Alireza Nesari, a member of parliament’s construction committee, said that while the sanctions’ economic effects were “clear and visible,” Iran was familiar with such measures and had “good practice” in coping with them.
“The art of officials is to preserve internal unity and make conditions bearable for people,” he said, urging the government to secure basic goods, control currency and gold prices, and support households with food, housing, jobs and family incentives.
Nesari warned that failure to control inflation could trigger social unrest, and called on supervisory and security bodies to curb profiteering.
“If the government does not manage economic and livelihood conditions, people will certainly protest,” he said.
