Iran’s current economic situation “looks eerily similar to Egypt’s in the run-up to the 2011 revolution that toppled Hosni Mubarak,” David Rosenberg writes for Haaretz (paywall). Iran is currently suffering from high unemployment rates and economic growth figures that seem healthy but do not translate to improved living conditions for the majority of the population, which was also the case in Egypt pre-2011. Tehran’s economic growth is also benefiting corrupt cronies the most, Rosenberg says. “None of this necessarily means Iran will go the way Egypt did seven years ago. All the economic ingredients you need to bake the cake of revolution are there, but that doesn’t mean they will come together this time. Yet, unless fundamentals change — and it doesn’t look like they will — there will be another time, and another, and eventually, the cake will come together.”
More from Enterprise
The National Bank of Egypt and Banque Misr just hiked rates on CDs — moves that could see the EGP gain against the USD
NBE and BM both hiked rates on CDs by 125…
Qatar’s Green Sky Capital secures financing for USD 200 mn SAF plant
The facility could add more than 10% to global SAF…
FinMin targets EGP tns in new debt as it revises financing gap to EGP 4 tn
The new strategy aims to ease short-term pressure and expand…
Kiwe gets Central Bank green light to launch nationwide
The startup is backed by our friends at EFG Hermes,…