In the next two to four months, Iran’s economy is poised for significant deterioration, characterized by high inflation, rising unemployment, and declining real incomes, leading to severe stagflation. The economy was already in a fragile state before the onset of war, facing inflation rates over 50% and a depreciating rial. The conflict worsens the situation, particularly impacting key industries like petrochemicals and metals, which contributed about $25-30 billion in export revenue in 2024.
Widespread damage to infrastructure, coupled with input shortages and financial constraints, hampers production, leading to a decline in agricultural outputs and construction activity. Internet outages further cripple economic transactions, costing an estimated $37 million per day.
The banking system, stressed pre-war and severely impacted by the collapse of Ayande Bank, now faces a liquidity crisis, with reduced lending and increased failure risks looming. Households are expected to cut back on spending significantly due to rising prices, diminished incomes, and reduced access to credit, which could amplify unemployment and lower living standards.
Three potential scenarios could unfold:
-
Ceasefire with the U.S. and Israel: If hostilities do not escalate, oil exports may continue, albeit with limitations. Inflation is expected to remain high as industrial activity falters and household pressure mounts.
-
Complete Naval Blockade: A strict blockade could sharply reduce foreign currency inflows, leading to more severe inflation and disruption of imports. Although revenue from "ghost fleets" may temporarily sustain some inflows, government prioritization of military funding could exacerbate living standards issues.
- Naval Blockade with Military Operation: A more extensive military operation could halt much trade, resulting in extreme scarcity of resources. Inflation would skyrocket as economic activity ceases, potentially leading to a complete economic collapse within months.
Despite the dire forecasts, complete hyperinflation or economic collapse is not expected immediately, but challenges will continue to escalate, straining household and industrial wealth significantly.


