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Iran government moves to revise budget after parliamentary rejection

Dec 30, 2025, 09:06 GMT+0
President Masoud Pezeshkian at the parliament
President Masoud Pezeshkian at the parliament

Iran’s president has offered to rewrite his proposed 1405 budget after parliament rejected the draft, opening talks with lawmakers on pay rises, taxes and subsidies, the parliament speaker said.

Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf said on Tuesday that President Masoud Pezeshkian’s letter to parliament seeking talks with lawmakers over changes to the government’s proposed 1405 budget amounts to a withdrawal and revision of the bill and the submission of a new budget plan.

Ghalibaf’s comments came after parliament’s presiding board read out a letter from Pezeshkian addressed to the speaker, in which the president said his government was ready to engage with lawmakers and the powerful joint budget committee to amend the draft budget while observing inflation constraints and the overall spending ceiling.

In the letter, Pezeshkian said the government was open to revising the bill to raise salaries and benefits for state employees and pensioners, adjust effective tax rates to ease pressure on businesses, recalibrate tax exemptions to favor lower-income earners, modify planned value-added tax increases so proceeds fund food voucher schemes, and pursue broader changes aimed at expanding subsidies to support household livelihoods.

The move follows Monday’s decision by the joint parliamentary committee to reject the budget’s general framework by a wide margin, citing concerns over inflationary pressures, falling purchasing power and doubts over the government’s revenue projections.

Parliament’s budget committee said it rejected the bill chiefly because the government’s proposed 20% pay raise for state employees and pensioners would lag inflation and cut real purchasing power, with lawmakers warning of a further squeeze on household living standards.

The committee also flagged the inflationary impact of the government’s plan to raise value-added tax by two percentage points (to 12%), saying it was unclear how the resulting price pressures would be offset for lower-income groups, including via promised subsidies such as food vouchers.

In addition, lawmakers cited ambiguities over revenue assumptions, including the transparency and reliability of oil income and foreign-currency inflows, as well as uncertainties around how subsidized exchange-rate allocations and other subsidies – such as bread support – would reach end consumers rather than being lost to inefficiency or rent-seeking.

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Iran president orders dialogue with protesters as chants target Khamenei

Dec 29, 2025, 22:13 GMT+0

Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian on Monday issued his first official response to the latest protests over worsening economic conditions, saying he has instructed his interior minister to hold talks with demonstrators.

In a post on X, Pezeshkian said he had ordered Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi to “listen to the legitimate demands of protesters” and help the government “respond responsibly.”

Pezeshkian said improving people’s livelihoods remains his “daily concern,” and that reforms to the banking and monetary system are on the agenda.

But it remains unclear how the dialogue he has proposed will work or whether it can contain protests that are increasingly political in tone.

The unrest began with anger over the surging price of the US dollar and the collapse of the rial but quickly broadened.

Strikes and demonstrations spread nationwide on Monday, turning violent in several cities as nighttime crowds chanted against the ruling system and bazaar merchants vowed to continue their shutdowns.

In Tehran, large parts of the Grand Bazaar were shuttered, while clashes were reported in central streets.

While the slogans were mainly focused on economic issues on the first day, the second day's chants underscored a transition from economic frustration to more explicit political dissent.

Chants in several cities targeted Iran's political authority, with crowds shouting slogans such as "death to the dictator" and "Seyyed Ali (Khamenei) will be toppled this year".

The turmoil has been fueled by a currency crisis that pushed the dollar to roughly 144,000 tomans over the weekend. The head of Iran’s central bank resigned amid the turmoil, and Pezeshkian appointed former chief Abdolnaser Hemmati in a move seen as aimed at calming markets.

Iran lawmakers reject draft budget, flag revenue risks and inflation fears

Dec 29, 2025, 14:13 GMT+0

Iran’s parliamentary budget committee has rejected the overall framework of the government’s 1405 (2026–27) budget bill, dealing an early setback to President Masoud Pezeshkian’s economic agenda amid soaring inflation and currency turmoil.

The Majlis’ joint budget committee voted 32–9 against the bill’s general outlines on Monday, citing concerns that the proposal would fuel inflation, further erode household purchasing power and rely on revenue assumptions lawmakers fear will not be met.

The committee said its report rejecting the bill will now be sent to parliament’s leadership for debate in an open session, where lawmakers will decide whether to return the budget to the government for revision.

The budget had been formally submitted to parliament last week, as Iran grapples with mounting fiscal pressures, a sliding rial and rising public discontent over living costs.

  • Iran president says budget cannot match wages to inflation

    Iran president says budget cannot match wages to inflation

Iran replaces central bank chief as currency crisis deepens

Dec 29, 2025, 13:57 GMT+0

Iran’s president has appointed former economy minister Abdolnaser Hemmati as the new head of the central bank, state-linked media reported on Monday, confirming a leadership change amid turmoil in currency markets.

Mehdi Tabatabaei, deputy head of communications at the president’s office, said on X that President Masoud Pezeshkian had decided to name Hemmati as central bank governor.

The move follows days of conflicting reports over the fate of Mohammad Reza Farzin, who had faced intensifying criticism as the rial slid to record lows and inflation accelerated.

Earlier on Monday, Iran’s judiciary denied reports that senior political leaders had agreed to retain Farzin, saying no such decision had been taken and that the matter fell solely within the president’s authority.

Later, the president’s office confirmed that Farzin had submitted his resignation earlier in December.

Hemmati, a former governor of the central bank and ex-economy minister, returns to the post as Iran grapples with severe currency instability.

On Monday, the dollar was trading at around 1.41 million rials on the open market, while gold prices also hit record highs, triggering protests and strikes by shopkeepers in parts of Tehran.

Iran’s top judge vows crackdown on ‘economic disruptors’

Dec 29, 2025, 10:54 GMT+0

Iran’s judiciary warned on Monday that it would pursue and punish individuals accused of disrupting the country’s economic system, as authorities face mounting pressure from a collapsing currency, high inflation and widening public unrest.

Judiciary chief Gholamhossein Mohseni Ejei said those whose actions increase pressure on people’s livelihoods – whether deliberately or not – would be warned and, if they persist, prosecuted, according to remarks carried by state media.

“Those who, knowingly or unknowingly, put added pressure on people and their livelihoods and effectively move in the direction of the enemy’s objectives must be cautioned,” Ejei said. “If they do not heed these warnings, they must be seriously pursued and punished by the relevant authorities.”

Ejei framed economic disruptions as part of what he described as coordinated “psychological and economic pressure” by Iran’s adversaries, saying judicial authorities must respond decisively.

He cited laws allowing harsh penalties for acts deemed to constitute “corruption on earth,” a charge that can carry the death penalty, including in cases of large-scale economic disruption.

He said penalties such as fines were insufficient in the current climate. “These fines are not deterrent,” Ejei said, calling for punishments proportionate to current conditions.

The judiciary chief also stressed that responsibility extended beyond traders to officials who enable economic violations. He warned that individuals inside government bodies who facilitate hoarding, smuggling or currency abuses would face prosecution.

Addressing currency volatility, Ejei said authorities must identify those responsible for market instability.

He cited figures from central bank officials indicating that around $18 billion in export revenues had not been returned to the country.

The warning comes amid sharp falls in the rial, accelerating inflation and protests by shopkeepers in Tehran over rising costs and economic mismanagement.

Iran judiciary denies reports of decision to retain central bank chief

Dec 29, 2025, 10:39 GMT+0

Iran’s judiciary on Monday denied reports that the country’s top political leaders had approved the retention of the central bank governor, pushing back against swirling speculation over his fate as the rial slides to record lows and economic pressure mounts.

In a statement carried by state media, the judiciary’s media center said reports that a decision by the heads of Iran’s three branches of power had endorsed the continuation of Mohammad Reza Farzin as central bank governor were “not true.”

“No decision was taken in the meeting of the heads of powers regarding the retention of the central bank governor,” the statement said, adding that the matter falls within the authority of President Masoud Pezeshkian.

The denial follows two days of conflicting reports in Iranian media over whether Farzin had resigned, been dismissed, or would remain in office.

Some outlets reported that Farzin had submitted his resignation earlier in December and that a committee had begun reviewing candidates to replace him, while others said he had been kept on with the backing of senior political leaders.

Later on Monday, the president’s office confirmed that Farzin had submitted his resignation, but said it had not yet been approved by the president.

The judiciary’s clarification came as Iran grapples with a sharp deterioration in economic conditions, marked by a steep fall in the rial and accelerating inflation.

On Monday, the US dollar traded about 1.41 million rials on the open market, while gold prices also hit record highs, prompting protests and strikes by shopkeepers in parts of Tehran.

Farzin, who was appointed under former president Ebrahim Raisi and retained after Pezeshkian took office, has faced growing criticism from lawmakers over currency instability and the central bank’s handling of foreign exchange shortages.

Reports of tension between Farzin and members of parliament surfaced earlier this month during a closed-door session ahead of the government’s submission of its draft budget, with some media saying the governor offered no new solutions to curb currency volatility.

President Pezeshkian has acknowledged the strain caused by energy subsidies and foreign exchange pressures, but has said the government lacks the resources to shield households fully from inflation.