Untitled Document
Fuel prices have quintupled in two weeks as the government starts to
reduce subsidies.
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Upward trend:A customer pumps gas in Baghdad last week. Over the summer, gas was selling for about 5 cents a gallon. Now it's about 65 cents, and at the end of the price increases, gasoline will cost about the same as it does in other gulf countries, about $1.(Karim Sahib / AFP/Getty Images)
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Iraq's government has sharply raised the price of fuel and other petroleum
products this month, sparking discontent and protests and worrying international
observers who say the increases could hurt millions of poor Iraqis and throw the
country into further turmoil.
Since the Dec. 15 parliamentary election, fuel prices have increased fivefold,
mostly because the outgoing government of Prime Minister Ibrahim Jafari has
cut subsidies as part of a debt-forgiveness deal it signed with the International
Monetary Fund.
The move has shocked Iraqis long accustomed to hefty subsidies of gasoline,
kerosene, cooking gas and other fuels, and thousands have demonstrated in and
around the capital to protest the price increases. The oil minister has threatened
to quit.
"Iraqis had some hope that this election would be a new start,"
said Mustafa Hussam Haidary, 46, as he waited to fill up his pickup truck at
a Baghdad gas station. "This hope was gone because the explosions and car
bombs came back on the next day, the conflicts between the political blocs started
again, and then suddenly all prices increased after the government made their
move on the oil products."
Iraqis had gone from "hopeful to sudden panic and sorrow again,"
he added. "I think Iraqis have lost trust in their government."
Iraqi and Western officials say the government spends about $5 billion a year
on the fuel subsidies. But the Finance Ministry has estimated the total cost
at $6.9 billion, or 28% of the country's projected GDP this year, because the
low prices have encouraged a huge smuggling business, with gas bought in Iraq
shipped out at a profit to Iran, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and other
countries.
Over the summer, gas was selling for about 5 cents a gallon. Now it's about
65 cents, and at the end of the price increases, gasoline will cost about the
same in Iraq as it does in other countries in the Persian Gulf, about $1 per
gallon. The prices of kerosene, diesel and cooking gas have seen similar or
steeper increases. Diesel costs about 38 cents per gallon.
Though that may seem cheap to Americans, wages in Iraq are far below those
in the United States. Employees in government ministries, for example, earn
about $130 a month on average, putting them among the top earners in Iraq. Millions
of other Iraqis live in poverty, relying on food handouts from the government.
About a fourth of all Iraqi households subsist on less than $1 a day.
Eliminating the subsidies should allow Iraq's government to boost spending
on infrastructure, the IMF said.
"Because of the government subsidies, Iraq had the lowest gas prices
in the world," said Bill Murray, an IMF spokesman in the US "The idea
is to redirect subsidies for petroleum products - that were actually subsidizing
the black market - to improving public services. That money should be invested
in health and education."
"The IMF decision on Dec. 23 to approve a standby arrangement for Iraq
will permit the continuation of a process of debt relief that should see the
forgiveness of 80% of a total debt of about $120 billion," a Western official
said on condition of anonymity.
Despite its huge oil reserves, Iraq has long struggled with economic problems.
Before the US-led invasion of 2003, international sanctions and a state-run
economy hampered economic growth.
Sanctions were lifted after the invasion, and the economy is opening up. But
violence, political instability and upheaval have retarded growth. Unemployment
is high; various estimates place it between 28% and 60%. The only construction
cranes in the capital are those for building the new US Embassy. As much as
95% of government revenue comes from oil exports. Officials barely collect taxes
or customs.
Mohammed Rasheed Kabaan, 38, who owns a gas station in Baghdad, said reducing
subsidies was necessary and would benefit the country in the long term. But
the sudden and steep price increase had been a miscalculation, he said.
"First of all, people just came out of elections a couple of days ago,
obviously hoping for some improvements," he said. "So it was very
wrong timing.... They should do it gradually, explaining to people its positive
impact."
It was unclear Tuesday who in the government decided on the timing of the
subsidy reductions. Observers fear the rapid price increases could further exacerbate
tensions in the country.
"It's crazy, socially and politically," said Robert Mabro, former
chairman of the Oxford Institute of Energy Studies and an expert on oil. Other
initiatives should take precedence, he said, such as improving security and
the general climate for investment.
"The subsidies may be big, but the situation in Iraq is such a mess,"
Mabro said. "If there is a price increase, if they remove some of the subsidies,
it will cause a lot of hardship."
To mitigate the effects of the price hikes, the government is planning to
increase financial support for those hardest hit, said an Oil Ministry spokesman.
The government has also begun running advertisements pointing out that price
increases are necessary to secure the country's future.
Even after the increases of December, Iraqi fuel prices still don't cover
production costs, the Western official said.
"Twenty dinars a liter is basically free," he said. "The only
thing you're spending is your time waiting in line. The people who have automobiles
presumably have more disposable income. Poor people are not necessarily using
cars."
Iraqis will have to readjust to a life without such heavy subsidies for the
economy to improve, the official said. But Iraq must also increase oil production,
attract investment and restart its industry, which has proved difficult amid
continuing violence.
Rebels have consistently targeted oil pipelines and refineries. Since the
start of the war, there have been at least 280 attacks on the oil infrastructure
in Iraq, with at least 96 in the last year - almost two per week.
Because of poor security, chronic electricity shortages and crumbling infrastructure,
foreigners as well as rich Iraqis have balked at investing in the country, opting
to keep their money on the sidelines or place their bets on ventures in Jordan
and the United Arab Emirates.
US and Western officials point out that construction in the more stable Kurdish-controlled
north of Iraq has been booming. They say that trend could spread through Iraq
if security improves.
Another problem, Western officials said, is that many countries that have
promised aid and foreign investment to Iraq have yet to deliver, forcing the
government to come up with other ways to balance its books. Iraq has also begun
dismantling the legacy of the UN oil-for-food program, which allowed Saddam
Hussein's regime to sell oil only to buy food and medicine; those items were
then distributed to each family based on a ration system.
Iraqi families rich and poor still get monthly food baskets. Iraqi and US
officials would like to replace the program with an ordinary welfare system
that provides benefits for those living in poverty.
But it is the sudden rise in fuel prices that has caused the most consternation.
Around the country in recent days, people have taken to the streets in protest.
This week, a send-off for those leaving the western city of Fallujah to go
on the hajj, the pilgrimage to Mecca, turned into a protest of fuel prices as
well as election results.
On Dec. 18, demonstrators in the southern city of Amarah clashed with police
after gathering in front of the provincial government building. Farther south
in Basra, drivers blocked roads and burned tires near gas stations.
The governor of Basra then decided to disregard the central government's edict
on reducing subsidies, and police officers announced a return to previous prices
through loudspeakers around town. It's unclear how the dispute will be resolved.
Oil Minister Ibrahim Bahr Uloum has said that if poor Iraqis do not receive
government aid to help pay for fuel, he will quit.
Selling Iraqis on the long-term benefit of the cut in subsidies may be tough.
"I myself do not own a car, but this increase of prices will enhance
inflation on all products," said Ayid Abed Razaq Salman, 43. "I think
the government should take immediate steps before these peaceful demonstrations
turn violent."