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Iran, What Happened to Your High Income?

Following the livelihood protests, plenty of nationwide and social safety pensioners gathered on Tuesday, January 26 in several cities of Iran, together with Yazd, Ahvaz, Kermanshah, and Qazvin.

According to the reviews obtained by Voice of America and revealed on social media on Tuesday, January 26, retired protesters chanted slogans similar to “high-income Iran, what occurred to you”, “poverty, corruption and embezzlement are the results of your work”, “retired To rise up, towards poverty and discrimination”, and “The imprisoned trainer needs to be freed” protested towards the actions of the authorities of the Islamic Republic in addition to judicial pressures on union activists.

Implementation of assimilation, wage improve equal to the speed of inflation, and efficient insurance coverage, in addition to the request for the discharge of imprisoned commerce union activists, are among the many calls for of the protesting retirees and pensioners.

Yazd

Ahvaz

Kermanshah

Ahvaz

Qazvin

Livelihood protests of pensioners, Qazvin, Tuesday 26 January 1402

Livelihood protests of retirees have continued weekly and on completely different days of the week prior to now months. Meanwhile, observers say Budget Bill 1403 will improve pressures on retirees and lecturers subsequent yr.

Protests of pensioners in Iran, Kermanshah

Protests of pensioners in Iran, Kermanshah

In the previous few days, three organizations of educators in Iran have revealed an announcement stating that crucial flaw within the 1403 funds is “not allocating an unbiased line to the funds for the equalization of pensioners’ salaries and the continuation of the rating of lecturers with a secure monetary supply”.

Farrokh Zandi, an economist based mostly in Toronto, lately instructed Voice of America that one of many foremost issues of the Islamic Republic is the massive funds deficit.

Also, Jamshid Damoui, an economist residing in California, referring to the “fictitious numbers” within the Islamic Republic of Iran’s funds invoice 1403, instructed the Persian part of the Voice of America that we must always count on higher inflation in Iran.

In addition, Peyman Molavi, an economist, instructed Tehran’s Etemad Chap newspaper that decimalization is a “new retailer” for the Ministry of Cooperation, Labor and Social Welfare, and even when this ministry is closed, nothing particular will occur within the nation.

According to him, paying subsidies in an financial system with excessive inflation is ineffective, and the insurance policies in Iran have grow to be much like Venezuela, which is “finally ineffective.”

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