TEHRAN, Iran — Every day, Iranians go to stores and find prices rising. Some post photos on social media of the shrinking contents of their shopping carts as they struggle to buy enough basic staples for their families. The mounting cost of living is an extra weight bearing down as Iranians prepare for a possible war with the U.S. and wrestle with the aftermath of protests that swept the country last month.
''Everybody is under pressure: merchants, civil servants, laborers," said Ebrahim Momeni, a 52-year-old retired civil servant. "The weaker class of people is being crushed.''
Iran's economy has struggled for years because of international sanctions and mismanagement.
It experienced some relief under a 2015 nuclear deal that lifted many sanctions, until U.S. President Donald Trump unilaterally withdrew from the accord in 2018. Since coming back into office more than a year ago, Trump revived a ''maximum pressure'' campaign, expanding sanctions that target Iran's financial sector and energy exports. On Wednesday, his administration imposed new sanctions on 30 people and companies accused of enabling Iran's production of ballistic missiles and drones, and illicit oil sales.
The pressure has accelerated the devaluation of Iran's currency, the rial. In 2015, when the nuclear deal was signed, the rial traded at about 32,000 to the dollar. In late December, it was at 1.3 million to the dollar. On Wednesday, it had reached a new low at 1.65 million rials to the dollar — worsened by fears of a U.S. attack.
Lower classes desperate for relief as prices jump
Inflation has surpassed 46% compared with January of last year. Economists warn that the rial's accelerating decline risks feeding a vicious cycle of higher prices and reduced purchasing power. They expect double-digit inflation to plague Iran's economy — which also suffers from high unemployment among younger people — for years to come.
The plunging value of the rial was one trigger for protests that began in late December in Tehran's main bazaar and then spiraled nationwide.