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Privatization in Iran

According to the Fourth Five-Year Economic Development Plan (2005–2010), the Privatization Organization of Iran affiliated with the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Finance is in charge of setting prices and ceding shares to the general public and on the Tehran Stock Exchange. The privatization effort is primarily backed by reformist members of the Iranian government and society who hope that privatization can bring about economic and social change.

In 2007, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei requested that government officials speed up implementation of the policies outlined in the amendment of Article 44, and move towards economic privatization. Khamenei also suggested that ownership rights should be protected in courts set up by the Justice Ministry; the hope was that this new protection would give an additional measure of security and encourage private investment.[1][2] Despite these statements, true official backing for privatization remains very slow due to political reasons.

Some 80 percent of the companies subject to Article 44 of the Constitution would be transferred to public ownership, 40 percent of which will be conducted through the "Justice Shares" Scheme and the rest through the Tehran Stock Exchange. The government will keep the title of the remaining 20 percent.[3]

It is widely believed that if current governmental organizations are privatized they will need to become more efficient. At present many are not profitable due to large numbers of unnecessary employees hired by the government to reduce unemployment. Furthermore, many of these companies are subsidized by oil revenues. True privatization will inevitably lead to many unpopular job cuts and large scale lay offs.[4]

The current privatization effort calls for an initial public offering (IPO) of five percent of the firms being privatized. Once the five percent is public, it will establish a base market price for future offerings. According to a study conducted by the IMF in 18 countries, privatization adds 2 percent to the government's GDP per annum.[5]

The Iranian constitution edit

According to the of the Iranian Constitution, the economy of Iran is to consist of three sectors: state, cooperative, and private; and is to be based on systematic and sound planning.

  • The state sector is to include all large-scale industries, foreign trade, major minerals, banking, insurance, power generation, dams and large-scale irrigation networks, radio and television, post, telegraph and telephone services, aviation, shipping, roads, railroads and the like; all these will be publicly owned and administered by the State.
  • The cooperative sector is to include cooperative companies (Bonyad) and enterprises concerned with production and distribution, in urban and rural areas, in accordance with Islamic criteria.
  • The private sector consists of those activities concerned with construction, agriculture, animal husbandry, industry, trade, and services that supplement the economic activities of the state and cooperative sectors.

A strict interpretation of the above has never been enforced in the Islamic Republic and the private sector has been able to play a much larger role than is outlined in the Constitution. In recent years, the role of the private sector has been further on the increase. Furthermore, an amendment of the article in 2004 has allowed 80 percent of state assets to be privatized (ref: Note C, article 44 of Constitution).[6]

Background edit

Value of shares divested by IPO (2001–2015)[7]

  Tender (38.5%)
  Iran Fara Bourse (12.8%)
  Negotiation (0.2%)

Iranian Revolution and Iran–Iraq War (1979–88) edit

In July 1979, six months after the victory of the Revolution, 28 private banks that held 43.9 percent of the total assets of all the Iranian banks in their possession, were declared nationalized by the government. At the same time, all the car-making, copper, steel and aluminum industries, as well as the assets of 51 capitalists and major industrialists and their next of kin were declared nationalized by the government.[8] In 1982, Mostazafen Foundation of Islamic Revolution alone came to possess 203 manufacturing and industrial factories, 472 big agricultural fields, 101 major construction firms, 238 trade and services companies and 2,786 big plots of real estates.[8]

Immediately following the outbreak of the Iran–Iraq War over 80% of Iran's economy came under the control of the government. This created numerous problems for Iran as previously internationally competitive companies, such as Iran Air or Iran Khodro, degraded into basic domestic companies that could barely function without massive government subsidies – primarily derived from oil revenues.

Rafsanjani government (1989–97) edit

After the Iran–Iraq War in 1988, the Iranian government declared its intention to privatize most state industries in an effort to stimulate the ailing economy. The sale of state-owned factories and companies proceeded slowly, however (mostly because of the opposition in Majlis), and most industries remained state-owned in the early 21st century (70% of the economy as of 2006). The majority of heavy industry—including steel, petrochemicals, copper, automobiles, and machine tools—was in the public sector, while most light industry was privately owned.

Khatami government (1997–2005) edit

In 2004, under the presidency of reformist Mohammad Khatami a number of efforts were made to eliminate the role of the government: The Tehran Stock Exchange was re-launched, which allowed a mechanism for trading shares of government companies. Elements of the constitution (article 44) that decreed that core-infrastructure should remain state run were eliminated,[9] and private banks were launched.

Despite plans to sell billions worth of state assets to the private sector, uptake was very slow. A common criticism of the privatization effort by investors was the only local Iranian organizations that are capable of buying the large share blocks are themselves government owned. Also analysts have blamed international fears about the Iranian nuclear programme and an absence of transparency and information reporting for the lack of enthusiasm for state assets. In 2005, Iran tried to sell $2.5bn of government assets but only managed to offload less than 30 per cent.[10] At present, at least 20 percent of the companies slated for selloff are officially loss-making. While the rest have earned an average profit of 5.5 percent in recent years, that figure does not take into account the extensive political and economic incentives and monopoly protections that they enjoy.[4]

Ahmadinejad government (2005–2013) edit

In July 2006, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei decreed a renewed effort to privatize the economy and said in his order that “ceding 80 per cent of the shares of large companies will serve to bring about economic development, social justice and the elimination of poverty”. The decree is also an effort to revive Iran's stalled privatization programme and kick-start the country's many uncompetitive industries, which are heavily protected by subsidies.[10]

In February 2008, Iran announced that 3 newly formed Investment Banks (AminIB, Novin[11] and Pasargad Bank) will take share subscriptions and act as an intermediary between the Privatization Organization and the stock exchange, helping Iran divest state-owned enterprises.[12]

Close to 370 trillion rials worth of shares of firms covered by Article 44 of the Constitution have been sold to the private sector from 2006 to 2009. The value of government assets are between 1,000 and 1,100 trillion rials ($110 billion), one third of which have been ceded to the private sector (December 2008).[13]

In 2009 it was reported that 30 percent of the revenues obtained from ceding the ownership of state entities within the framework of Article 44 of the Constitution are allocated to the nationwide cooperatives.[14]

As of 2009, Iran has privatized $63 billion worth of government equity in state-owned firms since 2005 (out of $120 billion). Subsequently, the disinvestment has brought the government's direct ownership in the GDP from 80% down to 40%.[citation needed] However, privatization through the Tehran Stock Exchange has tended to involve the sale of state-owned enterprises to other state actors such as pension funds.[15]

The Iranian Government announced in 2010 that it aims to raise some $12.5 billion by privatizing more than 500 state-owned firms.[citation needed] The money raised through privatization of the firms will be spent on paying the state's debts.

Rouhani government (2013–2021) edit

Iran's government was due to privatize 27 huge companies, 76 large companies, 31 medium companies, and 31 companies of other sizes in 2014. Huge companies are those companies with the shares value of over 10 trillion rials (about $403 million) and large companies are those with the shares value of over one trillion rials (about $40 million).[16] As of November 2014, the value of shares transferred over the mentioned 1.5 years (about $9.2 billion) is tantamount to the value of shares transferred since the establishment of the organization 12.5 years ago.[17]

As of 2016, regarding privatizations conducted by the IPO, 25% of such entities were divested to the Civil Servants Pension Organization, 15% to the Farmers, Villagers and Nomads’ Social Insurance Fund and 25% to the Social Security Organization and only 5% to the "real private sector".[18]

For years it has been the country's position to privatize 80% of all power plants. As of August 17, 2017 Energy Minister Hamid Chitchian has said that 55% of all power plants have completed privatization. The country aims to clinch international contracts in order to aid in attracting much needed investment.[19]

Raisi government (2021–) edit

"Justice shares" plan edit

Privatization shares distribution

  Workers (5%)
  Government (20%)

The government has approved a plan to offer shares to low-income families, starting with the poorest. Under the , millions of Iranian families will receive shares in state-owned firms, the value of which will be reimbursed in 20 years from the dividends generated by those shares. The project is in line with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's election promise to improve the condition of Iran's poor. Ahmadinejad in July 2005 promised to distribute shares to Iranian families, adding that these shares would be from state-run companies that must be privatized.[20] Justice shares are valued at $36 billion as of 2014.[21]

Implementation edit

The poorest strata of society shall receive justice shares at a 50 percent discount and will pay the said amount in 10-year instalments. Villagers and nomads shall have priority in this respect.[22] The holding period for those shares is a minimum of 2 years [afterwards].[clarification needed] Those covered by charity services rendered by the Imam Khomeini Relief Committee and the State Welfare Organizations as well as the jobless war veterans are prioritised in the first phase of the justice shares initiative. In the second phase, rural population and tribesmen will receive the shares.

Directives on identifying those eligible to receive justice shares (in the second phase) have been issued and the shares will be distributed (among the rural residents and the tribesmen) after receiving their national code number. Up to 6.5 million rural residents who qualify for the shares have been identified and that 1.2 million more people are yet to complete their documents. The Government is promoting the shareholding culture in Iran. The total number of shareholders has reached 700,000 people and this figure is expected to reach 24-25 million. In December 2006, the Government informed that some 4.6 million low-income Iranians had received Justice shares worth $2.5 billion as part of the privatization scheme. Each person received around $550 in shares with a maximum of 5 payments for each family.[23]

In February 2008 the Iranian Economic Ministry announced that some 15 million rural people out of 23 million are entitled to justice shares by the next Iranian year (to start March 20, 2008).[24] In November 2008 Iran announced that some 22.5 million people have received justice shares.[25] However, in 2009 labor leaders complained that workers had received hardly any.[citation needed] More than seven million people have been categorized in the lowest-income bracket.[3] By mid-June 2009, it was reported that almost 40 million people had received justice shares.[26] As of 2020, some 49 million Iranians have Justice Shares. Beneficiaries of justice shares could not trade the shares and received a small part of the dividends between 2018 ad 2020.[27]

As of 2020, shareholders have the new option to either directly gain the ownership of their shares and sell it in the stock exchange, or let the investment companies manage their portfolio as in the past. The Justice Share portfolio includes 49 state-owned companies in the auto, metal, mining, and agriculture, petrochemical and banking sectors.[27]

Criticism edit

Some observers have argued that this "privatization" is modeled on the voucher distribution programs of Russia and Czechoslovakia in the 1990s, which, at least in the case of Russia, led to the rise of the oligarchs.[28][29] The Ministry of Economic Affairs and Finance (Iran) has announced that it was forming a special committee to facilitate the process of making Justice Shares tradable on the stock exchange.[21]

Shares for workers edit

As part of a policy of transferring shares of state firms to employees (5% of privatization proceeds),[citation needed] 20 million shares valued at 18.5 billion rials were transferred during September and October 2008, including to employees of Satkab, Iranian Mines and Mining Industries Development and Renovation Organization, and subsidiaries of the Industrial Development and Renovation Organization.[30]

Iranian expatriates' role edit

Privatization drive may gain further momentum if Iranian expatriates increase investment in their motherland. Iranian nationals residing abroad are holding significant assets. Many have invested their capital in other countries, following the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the 1980–1988 war. Statistics at hand suggest that close to $10 billion (of goods) were re-exported into Iran last year. Multinational companies, particularly Iranian firms mostly owned and controlled by Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, are involved in export of goods into the country from Dubai. There are differing estimates of the expatriates' total capital (1.3 trillion dollars[31]), but what is clear is that it is so huge that it will be enough to buy shares of all state companies. In Dubai alone, Iranian expatriates are estimated to have invested up to $200 billion.[32] If 10 percent of this capital arrives, things will change drastically in Iran.[33]

Investments edit

In 2000, the Iran Press Service reported that Iranian expatriates had invested between $200 and $400 billion in the United States, Europe, and China, but almost nothing in Iran. The Iranian government's efforts to encourage foreign investment from Iranians in the United States were thwarted in 1997 when President Bill Clinton issued an executive order prohibiting investments in Iran (ILSA).[34] Nevertheless, FIPPA provisions apply to all foreign investors, and many Iranian expatriates based in the US continue to make substantial investments in Iran.[35]

Expatriate fund edit

The government has proposed setting up a joint investment fund with $5 billion in basic capital and an economic union to serve Iranians living abroad. The stated goal is to attract investment from Iranian expatriates and using their experience in stimulating foreign investments.[36] Later, in 2010, it was announced that Iran will start the process by creating a national fund with a basic capital of eight million euros. This fund will later transform into a bank.[citation needed]

Foreign investment edit

Foreign investors can bid in Iranian privatization tenders, but need permission from the Economy Ministry on a case-by-case basis.[10] Iran has announced it will begin to allow foreign firms to purchase Iranian state-run companies, with the possibility of obtaining full ownership.[citation needed]

Offshore fund edit

A subsidiary of Iran's largest bank, Melli Investment Bank with branches in Dubai (UAE) and London, plans to launch a fund of up to $300 million to invest in the Tehran Stock Exchange, providing an alternative venue for foreigners to invest in the Iranian economy. The market, with a capitalisation of $37 billion, is trading at a fraction of the earnings multiples enjoyed by Iran's neighbours, while average earnings continue to grow at about 25 per cent a year. The fund will be composed of blue chip companies like Iran Khodro and will be based in the Cayman Island and managed from Iran.[37]

Top 100 Iranian companies edit

The ranking has been assessed by for the past 10 years.[38] Based on financial statements for March 2005–06, the '' were ranked and announced in a conference in early 2007. According to the economic expert in charge of the rankings, the main index considered was the sales of companies because "Sales figure indicates the growth of a corporation".

According to the same survey, while 67 percent of the firms have experienced a decline in profit margin, car manufacturers, cement factories, investment institutions and banks have had an increase in the same index. The Iranian year March 2005-06 was a good year for these industries.

Meanwhile, the Persian daily Ettelaat named the top five corporations as follows: Industrial Development and Renovation Organization (IDRO) ranking first with an asset of 112,658 billion rials followed by Iran Khodro Industrial Group with an asset of 65,971 billion rials, Mining Industries Development and Renovation Organization (IMIDRO) with 52,184 billion rials, SAIPA car factory with 40,528 billion rials and National Iranian Petrochemical Company with 32,024 billion rials. They were followed by SAPCO, Bank Melli Iran, Bank Saderat Iran, Mobarakeh Steel Co. and Bank Mellat taking the sixth to tenth positions.

Latest statistics show that the number of companies worth over one billion dollars on Tehran Stock Exchange (listed companies only) has reached 12. Among them are National Iranian Copper Industries Company (NICIC shares are worth $5.2 billion), Kharg Petrochemical Company, Ghadir petrochemical companies, Khuzestan Steel Company, Power Plant Projects Management Company (MAPNA), Retirement Investment Firm, Metal and Mine Investment Companies, Gol-Gohar Iron Ore Company ($2.1 billion), and Chadormalu Mining and Industrial Company.[39][40]

Valuation edit

The assets of the top 100 Iranian publicly traded corporations — not including the National Iranian Oil Company and affiliated companies, various IDRO-affiliated companies, the Defense Industries Organization, Iran Air and the Iran Aviation Industries Organization — add up to $86 billion, which is less than that of a corporation such as Microsoft.[41] But this does not account for goodwill that likely increases the real assets value of those same companies to more than one trillion US dollars.[citation needed][citation needed]

Major companies listed for privatization edit

Of 1,000 companies awaiting the cabinet's approval, 240 companies had the green light already to be privatized by March 2008.[42] As of 2014, Iran had also 930 industrial parks and zones, of which 731 are ready to be ceded to the private sector.[43]

Banking and insurance edit

Most smaller state banks will be open to flotation, but excluded key banks including the Central Bank of Iran, Bank Melli Iran, Sepah Bank of Iran, Bank of Industry and Mines, Bank of Agriculture, Housing Bank (Bank Maskan) and the Export Development Bank of Iran. The privatization-bound banks are Tejarat, Mellat, Refah, Saderat, and Post Bank (ceding 100 percent of stakes of all 5 banks).[44]

Insurance companies Asia, Dana and Alborz will be listed on the stock exchange in 2009 after review and improvement in their financial accounts, internal regulations, organizational structure and dispersion nationwide.[45] In 2008, the total insurance premiums generated in Iran were $4.3 billion. This is less than 0.1% of the world's total, while Iran has approximately 1% of the world's population. The insurance penetration rate is approximately 1.4%, significantly below the global average of 7.5%. This underdevelopment is also evident in product diversity. Approximately 60% of all insurance premiums are generated from car insurance. Also, 95% of all premiums come from general insurance contracts and only 5% relate to life products. Payout ratios have shown consistent growth over the years. Last year, the industry average payout ratio was 86%.

Industry edit

102 companies out of the total 130, affiliated with IDRO, were due to be privatized by March 2009[46] Leading automakers Iran Khodro and Saipa were also due to be privatized in March 2008.[47] In July 2010, the government sold a further 18% stake in both Iran Khodro and Saipa for about $2 billion in total, bringing down its participation in both companies to about 20%.[48][49] Shares of Iran Tractor Manufacturing Company have also been offered on the Tehran Stock Exchange as part of an IPO.[50]

Utilities edit

 
Shazand (Arak) power plant

Mapna Company. Sahand, Bistoun, Shazand (Arak), Shahid Montazeri, Tous, Shahid Rajaei and Neishabour power stations are among the profit-making plants, work on privatizing them will be finalized by late March 2007.[51] Jahrom, Khalij-e Fars (Persian Gulf) and Sahand power plants will be ceded to the private sector in 2009.[13][52] All domestic power plants will be privatized gradually, except those the government feels it should run to ensure security of the national electricity grid. Power plants of Damavand, Mashhad, Shirvan, Kerman, Khalij-e Fars, Abadan, Bisotoon, Sanandaj, Manjil and Binalood, which have been turned into public limited firms, are ready for privatization.[53] As of 2010, 20 power plants were ready for privatization in Iran.[54] Upon ceding the 20 power plants to IPO, some 40 percent of the capacity of power plants nationwide will be assigned to the private and cooperative sectors.[55]

Mines & metals edit

National Iranian Copper Industries Co.(NICICO), Mobarakeh Steel Co., Khuzestan Steel Company, Isfahan Steel Mills, Iranian Aluminum Company (IRALCO), Ehdas Sanat Company (ESC) and Iran Alloy Stell Co. are all candidates for privatization.[56][57] The Privatization Organization of Iran announced that Iranian Aluminum Co. and Bushehr Cement Co. would be privatized in June 2007.[58] The steel, cement and iron ore prices are currently being liberalized in Iran.

Transport edit

As planned, all airline companies except for Civil Aviation Organization as well as Ports and Shipping Organization should be ceded to the people. This covers flag carrier Iran Air and its affiliate Iran Aseman Airlines. The fast-growing Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines has also been lobbying for more independence.[10] The government has agreed to offer the shares of Iran Post Company in the bourse (2008).[59] The National Iranian Tanker Company's shares have been offered to the private sector in 2009.[60] In 2009 Iran announced that Imam Khomeini port, its biggest port in the Persian Gulf, will be privatized.[citation needed] Bandar Abbas has also been listed for privatization.[citation needed]

Telecommunication edit

In 2006, the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology announced that it will float the shares of affiliated companies such as Mobile Telecommunications Company in the stock market.[61]

Under the general policies of Article 44, telecom companies are categorised in four groups as follows:

  • Group One: Among the 30 provincial telecom networks, the fixed telecom networks pertain to those of Tehran, Isfahan, Fars, Hamedan, Ahvaz, Khorasan Razavi, Khuzestan and East Azarbaijan. The first group concerns fixed line telecom networks, including those in the public sector with 30 subsidiary telecom networks in provinces. The non-governmental sector includes companies such as Iraphone, Novin, Zahi Kish, Kouh-e Nour, Montazeran Adlgostar and Pouya Ertebat with each having hundreds of thousands of subscribers.
  • Group Two: The second group concerns mobile telephone networks. In the public sector, they include the Telecommunication Company of Iran (TCI) to be privatized by March 2008.[62] In the non-governmental sector, they include telecommunications companies such as Omran Kish, Isfahan, Rafsanjan Complex and Irancell.
  • Group Three: There is only one public network in the data network sector, namely Data and Telecommunications Company of Iran, which is considered a basic telecom network in terms of mobile networks and Shomal IT Company. In the non-governmental sector, there are over 100 companies with a shared data network.
  • Group Four: The subsidiary telecom network named Subsidiary Telecommunications Company is another basic telecom network. They are completely owned by the state and not targeted for privatization.

In 2009, 51% of TCI was sold to Mobin Trust Consortium, a consortium belonging to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps for the sum of $7.8 billion.[63]

Oil, gas and petrochemicals edit

 
Arak Petrochemical company
  • According to the Supreme Leader of Iran the downstream oil and gas sectors will be privatized, excluding the upstream oil and gas industry, the National Iranian Oil Company, the state companies involved in exploration and the production of crude oil and gas. Iran's Oil Ministry plans to cede shares of 95 percent of its affiliated companies to the private sector.[64] Just 7 out of 142 subsidiaries of the Ministry of Petroleum have been excluded from the privatization process.
  • Some shares will be dual-listed on regional foreign stock exchanges to attract expatriate investors. A list of 21 companies to be privatized will be released by mid-2007.[56][65] Of these companies, five belong to National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC), nine to National Iranian Petrochemical Company (NPC), five are affiliates of National Iranian Gas Company (NIGC), and two of National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company (NIORDC), including the Abadan Refinery.[66] National Iranian Gas Company, the Iranian Oil Terminals Company and the National Iranian Oil Products Distribution Company are also on the list.[67] Iranian Oil Terminals Co., a division of the National Iranian Oil Co., has four transport hubs that load more than 2,000 oil tankers per year.[68]
  • Iran is to target foreign investment in its energy sector by creating an umbrella group of nearly 50 state-run firms and listing its shares on four international stock exchanges. Under the privatization plan, 47 oil and gas companies (including PetroIran and North Drilling Company) worth an estimated $90 billion are to be privatized on the Tehran Stock Exchange by 2014.[69][70]
  • Iran's National Petrochemical Company (NPC) plans to privatize 17 companies by the end of 2007.[71] Forty percent of those shares will go to "Justice Shares" for underprivileged citizens in Iran. 20% will be allocated to NPC. 35% will be put on sale on the Tehran Stock Exchange and the remaining 5% will go the petrochemical industry personnel. The 20 percent allocated to the NPC is meant to support petrochemical industry projects but may be offered to the private sector in the future.[72] 89.6 percent of Shiraz Petrochemical Complex, and 27.76 percent of Petrochemical Investment Company will be sold to the public in June 2009.[73] All shares of domestic petrochemical firms will be offered to the public in the frame of a holding company by the end of Iranian year (ending March 21, 2010).[74] As part of the 2010 Iranian Economic Reform Plan, petrochemical companies, which use natural gas as their feedstock (rather than fuel), will pay no more than 65% of the average export price (rather than 75% for the general population) for a period of 10 years.
  • Iran also projects to privatize some of its oil refineries (2009).[57][73][75][76] Isfahan, Bandar Abbas, Tabriz, Shiraz, Kermanshah, Lavan, and Tehran (Shahid Tondgouyan) oil refineries will be transferred to the private sector but the ownership of Abadan and Arak oil refineries will remain in government control.[64]
  • The government of Iran announced in 2017 that a vast majority of the country's 3,600 gas and diesel stations along with 2,400 CNG stations would be privatized in order improve service and raise accountability. On August 8, 2017, a European firm based jointly in Greece and Romania announced it was planning to commercialize a number of stations. The deal is expected to grow economic ties between the EU and Iran.[77]

See also edit

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External links edit

  • Privatization Organization of Iran (in Persian and English) – affiliated with the Ministry of Economy and Finance (With latest info on the companies being privatized, including regulations)
    • (early 2007)
  • Federation of Euro-Asian Stock Exchanges Archived 14 December 2013 at archive.todayTehran Stock Exchange statistics, listing requirement, regulations, operations, comparisons and latest news (including IPOs)
  • Iran Industrial Management Company (in Persian) – Top 100 Iranian companies list
  • Economy and Business in Iran at Curlie
Press articles
  • – Iran Daily
  • – Iran Daily
  • Privatization of State-Owned Enterprises in Iran: Panacea or Prescription for Disaster By Dr. Ali Mostashari

privatization, iran, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, availabl. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message According to the Fourth Five Year Economic Development Plan 2005 2010 the Privatization Organization of Iran affiliated with the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Finance is in charge of setting prices and ceding shares to the general public and on the Tehran Stock Exchange The privatization effort is primarily backed by reformist members of the Iranian government and society who hope that privatization can bring about economic and social change In 2007 Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei requested that government officials speed up implementation of the policies outlined in the amendment of Article 44 and move towards economic privatization Khamenei also suggested that ownership rights should be protected in courts set up by the Justice Ministry the hope was that this new protection would give an additional measure of security and encourage private investment 1 2 Despite these statements true official backing for privatization remains very slow due to political reasons Some 80 percent of the companies subject to Article 44 of the Constitution would be transferred to public ownership 40 percent of which will be conducted through the Justice Shares Scheme and the rest through the Tehran Stock Exchange The government will keep the title of the remaining 20 percent 3 It is widely believed that if current governmental organizations are privatized they will need to become more efficient At present many are not profitable due to large numbers of unnecessary employees hired by the government to reduce unemployment Furthermore many of these companies are subsidized by oil revenues True privatization will inevitably lead to many unpopular job cuts and large scale lay offs 4 The current privatization effort calls for an initial public offering IPO of five percent of the firms being privatized Once the five percent is public it will establish a base market price for future offerings According to a study conducted by the IMF in 18 countries privatization adds 2 percent to the government s GDP per annum 5 Contents 1 The Iranian constitution 2 Background 2 1 Iranian Revolution and Iran Iraq War 1979 88 2 2 Rafsanjani government 1989 97 2 3 Khatami government 1997 2005 2 4 Ahmadinejad government 2005 2013 2 5 Rouhani government 2013 2021 2 6 Raisi government 2021 3 Justice shares plan 3 1 Implementation 4 Criticism 5 Shares for workers 6 Iranian expatriates role 6 1 Investments 6 2 Expatriate fund 7 Foreign investment 7 1 Offshore fund 8 Top 100 Iranian companies 8 1 Valuation 9 Major companies listed for privatization 9 1 Banking and insurance 9 2 Industry 9 3 Utilities 9 4 Mines amp metals 9 5 Transport 9 6 Telecommunication 9 7 Oil gas and petrochemicals 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksThe Iranian constitution editSee also Government of Iran According to the Article 44 of the Iranian Constitution the economy of Iran is to consist of three sectors state cooperative and private and is to be based on systematic and sound planning The state sector is to include all large scale industries foreign trade major minerals banking insurance power generation dams and large scale irrigation networks radio and television post telegraph and telephone services aviation shipping roads railroads and the like all these will be publicly owned and administered by the State The cooperative sector is to include cooperative companies Bonyad and enterprises concerned with production and distribution in urban and rural areas in accordance with Islamic criteria The private sector consists of those activities concerned with construction agriculture animal husbandry industry trade and services that supplement the economic activities of the state and cooperative sectors A strict interpretation of the above has never been enforced in the Islamic Republic and the private sector has been able to play a much larger role than is outlined in the Constitution In recent years the role of the private sector has been further on the increase Furthermore an amendment of the article in 2004 has allowed 80 percent of state assets to be privatized ref Note C article 44 of Constitution 6 Background editSee also Economic history of Iran Economy of Iran and Iranian Economic Reform Plan Value of shares divested by IPO 2001 2015 7 Tehran Stock Exchange 48 5 Tender 38 5 Iran Fara Bourse 12 8 Negotiation 0 2 Iranian Revolution and Iran Iraq War 1979 88 edit In July 1979 six months after the victory of the Revolution 28 private banks that held 43 9 percent of the total assets of all the Iranian banks in their possession were declared nationalized by the government At the same time all the car making copper steel and aluminum industries as well as the assets of 51 capitalists and major industrialists and their next of kin were declared nationalized by the government 8 In 1982 Mostazafen Foundation of Islamic Revolution alone came to possess 203 manufacturing and industrial factories 472 big agricultural fields 101 major construction firms 238 trade and services companies and 2 786 big plots of real estates 8 Immediately following the outbreak of the Iran Iraq War over 80 of Iran s economy came under the control of the government This created numerous problems for Iran as previously internationally competitive companies such as Iran Air or Iran Khodro degraded into basic domestic companies that could barely function without massive government subsidies primarily derived from oil revenues Rafsanjani government 1989 97 edit After the Iran Iraq War in 1988 the Iranian government declared its intention to privatize most state industries in an effort to stimulate the ailing economy The sale of state owned factories and companies proceeded slowly however mostly because of the opposition in Majlis and most industries remained state owned in the early 21st century 70 of the economy as of 2006 The majority of heavy industry including steel petrochemicals copper automobiles and machine tools was in the public sector while most light industry was privately owned Khatami government 1997 2005 edit In 2004 under the presidency of reformist Mohammad Khatami a number of efforts were made to eliminate the role of the government The Tehran Stock Exchange was re launched which allowed a mechanism for trading shares of government companies Elements of the constitution article 44 that decreed that core infrastructure should remain state run were eliminated 9 and private banks were launched Despite plans to sell billions worth of state assets to the private sector uptake was very slow A common criticism of the privatization effort by investors was the only local Iranian organizations that are capable of buying the large share blocks are themselves government owned Also analysts have blamed international fears about the Iranian nuclear programme and an absence of transparency and information reporting for the lack of enthusiasm for state assets In 2005 Iran tried to sell 2 5bn of government assets but only managed to offload less than 30 per cent 10 At present at least 20 percent of the companies slated for selloff are officially loss making While the rest have earned an average profit of 5 5 percent in recent years that figure does not take into account the extensive political and economic incentives and monopoly protections that they enjoy 4 Ahmadinejad government 2005 2013 edit In July 2006 Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei decreed a renewed effort to privatize the economy and said in his order that ceding 80 per cent of the shares of large companies will serve to bring about economic development social justice and the elimination of poverty The decree is also an effort to revive Iran s stalled privatization programme and kick start the country s many uncompetitive industries which are heavily protected by subsidies 10 In February 2008 Iran announced that 3 newly formed Investment Banks AminIB Novin 11 and Pasargad Bank will take share subscriptions and act as an intermediary between the Privatization Organization and the stock exchange helping Iran divest state owned enterprises 12 Close to 370 trillion rials worth of shares of firms covered by Article 44 of the Constitution have been sold to the private sector from 2006 to 2009 The value of government assets are between 1 000 and 1 100 trillion rials 110 billion one third of which have been ceded to the private sector December 2008 13 In 2009 it was reported that 30 percent of the revenues obtained from ceding the ownership of state entities within the framework of Article 44 of the Constitution are allocated to the nationwide cooperatives 14 As of 2009 Iran has privatized 63 billion worth of government equity in state owned firms since 2005 out of 120 billion Subsequently the disinvestment has brought the government s direct ownership in the GDP from 80 down to 40 citation needed However privatization through the Tehran Stock Exchange has tended to involve the sale of state owned enterprises to other state actors such as pension funds 15 The Iranian Government announced in 2010 that it aims to raise some 12 5 billion by privatizing more than 500 state owned firms citation needed The money raised through privatization of the firms will be spent on paying the state s debts Rouhani government 2013 2021 edit Iran s government was due to privatize 27 huge companies 76 large companies 31 medium companies and 31 companies of other sizes in 2014 Huge companies are those companies with the shares value of over 10 trillion rials about 403 million and large companies are those with the shares value of over one trillion rials about 40 million 16 As of November 2014 the value of shares transferred over the mentioned 1 5 years about 9 2 billion is tantamount to the value of shares transferred since the establishment of the organization 12 5 years ago 17 As of 2016 regarding privatizations conducted by the IPO 25 of such entities were divested to the Civil Servants Pension Organization 15 to the Farmers Villagers and Nomads Social Insurance Fund and 25 to the Social Security Organization and only 5 to the real private sector 18 For years it has been the country s position to privatize 80 of all power plants As of August 17 2017 Energy Minister Hamid Chitchian has said that 55 of all power plants have completed privatization The country aims to clinch international contracts in order to aid in attracting much needed investment 19 Raisi government 2021 edit Justice shares plan editSee also Social class in Iran and Bonyad Privatization shares distribution Justice shares 40 Tehran Stock Exchange IPO 35 Workers 5 Government 20 The government has approved a plan to offer shares to low income families starting with the poorest Under the Justice Shares plan millions of Iranian families will receive shares in state owned firms the value of which will be reimbursed in 20 years from the dividends generated by those shares The project is in line with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad s election promise to improve the condition of Iran s poor Ahmadinejad in July 2005 promised to distribute shares to Iranian families adding that these shares would be from state run companies that must be privatized 20 Justice shares are valued at 36 billion as of 2014 21 Implementation edit The poorest strata of society shall receive justice shares at a 50 percent discount and will pay the said amount in 10 year instalments Villagers and nomads shall have priority in this respect 22 The holding period for those shares is a minimum of 2 years afterwards clarification needed Those covered by charity services rendered by the Imam Khomeini Relief Committee and the State Welfare Organizations as well as the jobless war veterans are prioritised in the first phase of the justice shares initiative In the second phase rural population and tribesmen will receive the shares Directives on identifying those eligible to receive justice shares in the second phase have been issued and the shares will be distributed among the rural residents and the tribesmen after receiving their national code number Up to 6 5 million rural residents who qualify for the shares have been identified and that 1 2 million more people are yet to complete their documents The Government is promoting the shareholding culture in Iran The total number of shareholders has reached 700 000 people and this figure is expected to reach 24 25 million In December 2006 the Government informed that some 4 6 million low income Iranians had received Justice shares worth 2 5 billion as part of the privatization scheme Each person received around 550 in shares with a maximum of 5 payments for each family 23 In February 2008 the Iranian Economic Ministry announced that some 15 million rural people out of 23 million are entitled to justice shares by the next Iranian year to start March 20 2008 24 In November 2008 Iran announced that some 22 5 million people have received justice shares 25 However in 2009 labor leaders complained that workers had received hardly any citation needed More than seven million people have been categorized in the lowest income bracket 3 By mid June 2009 it was reported that almost 40 million people had received justice shares 26 As of 2020 some 49 million Iranians have Justice Shares Beneficiaries of justice shares could not trade the shares and received a small part of the dividends between 2018 ad 2020 27 As of 2020 shareholders have the new option to either directly gain the ownership of their shares and sell it in the stock exchange or let the investment companies manage their portfolio as in the past The Justice Share portfolio includes 49 state owned companies in the auto metal mining and agriculture petrochemical and banking sectors 27 Criticism editSome observers have argued that this privatization is modeled on the voucher distribution programs of Russia and Czechoslovakia in the 1990s which at least in the case of Russia led to the rise of the oligarchs 28 29 The Ministry of Economic Affairs and Finance Iran has announced that it was forming a special committee to facilitate the process of making Justice Shares tradable on the stock exchange 21 Shares for workers editSee also Labor force in Iran and Iranian labor law As part of a policy of transferring shares of state firms to employees 5 of privatization proceeds citation needed 20 million shares valued at 18 5 billion rials were transferred during September and October 2008 including to employees of Satkab Iranian Mines and Mining Industries Development and Renovation Organization and subsidiaries of the Industrial Development and Renovation Organization 30 Iranian expatriates role editSee also Iranian citizens abroad Privatization drive may gain further momentum if Iranian expatriates increase investment in their motherland Iranian nationals residing abroad are holding significant assets Many have invested their capital in other countries following the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the 1980 1988 war Statistics at hand suggest that close to 10 billion of goods were re exported into Iran last year Multinational companies particularly Iranian firms mostly owned and controlled by Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps are involved in export of goods into the country from Dubai There are differing estimates of the expatriates total capital 1 3 trillion dollars 31 but what is clear is that it is so huge that it will be enough to buy shares of all state companies In Dubai alone Iranian expatriates are estimated to have invested up to 200 billion 32 If 10 percent of this capital arrives things will change drastically in Iran 33 Investments edit See also Venture capital in Iran In 2000 the Iran Press Service reported that Iranian expatriates had invested between 200 and 400 billion in the United States Europe and China but almost nothing in Iran The Iranian government s efforts to encourage foreign investment from Iranians in the United States were thwarted in 1997 when President Bill Clinton issued an executive order prohibiting investments in Iran ILSA 34 Nevertheless FIPPA provisions apply to all foreign investors and many Iranian expatriates based in the US continue to make substantial investments in Iran 35 Expatriate fund edit The government has proposed setting up a joint investment fund with 5 billion in basic capital and an economic union to serve Iranians living abroad The stated goal is to attract investment from Iranian expatriates and using their experience in stimulating foreign investments 36 Later in 2010 it was announced that Iran will start the process by creating a national fund with a basic capital of eight million euros This fund will later transform into a bank citation needed Foreign investment editSee also Foreign Direct Investment in Iran and Tehran Stock Exchange Foreign investors can bid in Iranian privatization tenders but need permission from the Economy Ministry on a case by case basis 10 Iran has announced it will begin to allow foreign firms to purchase Iranian state run companies with the possibility of obtaining full ownership citation needed Offshore fund edit A subsidiary of Iran s largest bank Melli Investment Bank with branches in Dubai UAE and London plans to launch a fund of up to 300 million to invest in the Tehran Stock Exchange providing an alternative venue for foreigners to invest in the Iranian economy The market with a capitalisation of 37 billion is trading at a fraction of the earnings multiples enjoyed by Iran s neighbours while average earnings continue to grow at about 25 per cent a year The fund will be composed of blue chip companies like Iran Khodro and will be based in the Cayman Island and managed from Iran 37 Top 100 Iranian companies editSee also List of Iranian companies The ranking has been assessed by Iran Industrial Management Company for the past 10 years 38 Based on financial statements for March 2005 06 the 100 top Iranian corporations were ranked and announced in a conference in early 2007 According to the economic expert in charge of the rankings the main index considered was the sales of companies because Sales figure indicates the growth of a corporation According to the same survey while 67 percent of the firms have experienced a decline in profit margin car manufacturers cement factories investment institutions and banks have had an increase in the same index The Iranian year March 2005 06 was a good year for these industries Meanwhile the Persian daily Ettelaat named the top five corporations as follows Industrial Development and Renovation Organization IDRO ranking first with an asset of 112 658 billion rials followed by Iran Khodro Industrial Group with an asset of 65 971 billion rials Mining Industries Development and Renovation Organization IMIDRO with 52 184 billion rials SAIPA car factory with 40 528 billion rials and National Iranian Petrochemical Company with 32 024 billion rials They were followed by SAPCO Bank Melli Iran Bank Saderat Iran Mobarakeh Steel Co and Bank Mellat taking the sixth to tenth positions Latest statistics show that the number of companies worth over one billion dollars on Tehran Stock Exchange listed companies only has reached 12 Among them are National Iranian Copper Industries Company NICIC shares are worth 5 2 billion Kharg Petrochemical Company Ghadir petrochemical companies Khuzestan Steel Company Power Plant Projects Management Company MAPNA Retirement Investment Firm Metal and Mine Investment Companies Gol Gohar Iron Ore Company 2 1 billion and Chadormalu Mining and Industrial Company 39 40 Valuation edit See also Accounting standards in Iran The assets of the top 100 Iranian publicly traded corporations not including the National Iranian Oil Company and affiliated companies various IDRO affiliated companies the Defense Industries Organization Iran Air and the Iran Aviation Industries Organization add up to 86 billion which is less than that of a corporation such as Microsoft 41 But this does not account for goodwill that likely increases the real assets value of those same companies to more than one trillion US dollars citation needed citation needed Major companies listed for privatization editSee also Tehran Stock Exchange Of 1 000 companies awaiting the cabinet s approval 240 companies had the green light already to be privatized by March 2008 42 As of 2014 Iran had also 930 industrial parks and zones of which 731 are ready to be ceded to the private sector 43 Banking and insurance edit See also Banking and Insurance in Iran Most smaller state banks will be open to flotation but excluded key banks including the Central Bank of Iran Bank Melli Iran Sepah Bank of Iran Bank of Industry and Mines Bank of Agriculture Housing Bank Bank Maskan and the Export Development Bank of Iran The privatization bound banks are Tejarat Mellat Refah Saderat and Post Bank ceding 100 percent of stakes of all 5 banks 44 Insurance companies Asia Dana and Alborz will be listed on the stock exchange in 2009 after review and improvement in their financial accounts internal regulations organizational structure and dispersion nationwide 45 In 2008 the total insurance premiums generated in Iran were 4 3 billion This is less than 0 1 of the world s total while Iran has approximately 1 of the world s population The insurance penetration rate is approximately 1 4 significantly below the global average of 7 5 This underdevelopment is also evident in product diversity Approximately 60 of all insurance premiums are generated from car insurance Also 95 of all premiums come from general insurance contracts and only 5 relate to life products Payout ratios have shown consistent growth over the years Last year the industry average payout ratio was 86 Industry edit See also Industry of Iran and Automotive industry in Iran 102 companies out of the total 130 affiliated with IDRO were due to be privatized by March 2009 46 Leading automakers Iran Khodro and Saipa were also due to be privatized in March 2008 47 In July 2010 the government sold a further 18 stake in both Iran Khodro and Saipa for about 2 billion in total bringing down its participation in both companies to about 20 48 49 Shares of Iran Tractor Manufacturing Company have also been offered on the Tehran Stock Exchange as part of an IPO 50 Utilities edit See also Energy in Iran and List of power stations in Iran nbsp Shazand Arak power plantMapna Company Sahand Bistoun Shazand Arak Shahid Montazeri Tous Shahid Rajaei and Neishabour power stations are among the profit making plants work on privatizing them will be finalized by late March 2007 51 Jahrom Khalij e Fars Persian Gulf and Sahand power plants will be ceded to the private sector in 2009 13 52 All domestic power plants will be privatized gradually except those the government feels it should run to ensure security of the national electricity grid Power plants of Damavand Mashhad Shirvan Kerman Khalij e Fars Abadan Bisotoon Sanandaj Manjil and Binalood which have been turned into public limited firms are ready for privatization 53 As of 2010 20 power plants were ready for privatization in Iran 54 Upon ceding the 20 power plants to IPO some 40 percent of the capacity of power plants nationwide will be assigned to the private and cooperative sectors 55 Mines amp metals edit See also Mining in Iran and Construction in Iran National Iranian Copper Industries Co NICICO Mobarakeh Steel Co Khuzestan Steel Company Isfahan Steel Mills Iranian Aluminum Company IRALCO Ehdas Sanat Company ESC and Iran Alloy Stell Co are all candidates for privatization 56 57 The Privatization Organization of Iran announced that Iranian Aluminum Co and Bushehr Cement Co would be privatized in June 2007 58 The steel cement and iron ore prices are currently being liberalized in Iran Transport edit See also Transport in Iran As planned all airline companies except for Civil Aviation Organization as well as Ports and Shipping Organization should be ceded to the people This covers flag carrier Iran Air and its affiliate Iran Aseman Airlines The fast growing Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines has also been lobbying for more independence 10 The government has agreed to offer the shares of Iran Post Company in the bourse 2008 59 The National Iranian Tanker Company s shares have been offered to the private sector in 2009 60 In 2009 Iran announced that Imam Khomeini port its biggest port in the Persian Gulf will be privatized citation needed Bandar Abbas has also been listed for privatization citation needed Telecommunication edit See also Communications in Iran In 2006 the Ministry of Communications and Information Technology announced that it will float the shares of affiliated companies such as Mobile Telecommunications Company in the stock market 61 Under the general policies of Article 44 telecom companies are categorised in four groups as follows Group One Among the 30 provincial telecom networks the fixed telecom networks pertain to those of Tehran Isfahan Fars Hamedan Ahvaz Khorasan Razavi Khuzestan and East Azarbaijan The first group concerns fixed line telecom networks including those in the public sector with 30 subsidiary telecom networks in provinces The non governmental sector includes companies such as Iraphone Novin Zahi Kish Kouh e Nour Montazeran Adlgostar and Pouya Ertebat with each having hundreds of thousands of subscribers Group Two The second group concerns mobile telephone networks In the public sector they include the Telecommunication Company of Iran TCI to be privatized by March 2008 62 In the non governmental sector they include telecommunications companies such as Omran Kish Isfahan Rafsanjan Complex and Irancell Group Three There is only one public network in the data network sector namely Data and Telecommunications Company of Iran which is considered a basic telecom network in terms of mobile networks and Shomal IT Company In the non governmental sector there are over 100 companies with a shared data network Group Four The subsidiary telecom network named Subsidiary Telecommunications Company is another basic telecom network They are completely owned by the state and not targeted for privatization In 2009 51 of TCI was sold to Mobin Trust Consortium a consortium belonging to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps for the sum of 7 8 billion 63 Oil gas and petrochemicals edit See also Petroleum industry in Iran and Ministry of Petroleum Iran nbsp Arak Petrochemical companyAccording to the Supreme Leader of Iran the downstream oil and gas sectors will be privatized excluding the upstream oil and gas industry the National Iranian Oil Company the state companies involved in exploration and the production of crude oil and gas Iran s Oil Ministry plans to cede shares of 95 percent of its affiliated companies to the private sector 64 Just 7 out of 142 subsidiaries of the Ministry of Petroleum have been excluded from the privatization process Some shares will be dual listed on regional foreign stock exchanges to attract expatriate investors A list of 21 companies to be privatized will be released by mid 2007 56 65 Of these companies five belong to National Iranian Oil Company NIOC nine to National Iranian Petrochemical Company NPC five are affiliates of National Iranian Gas Company NIGC and two of National Iranian Oil Refining and Distribution Company NIORDC including the Abadan Refinery 66 National Iranian Gas Company the Iranian Oil Terminals Company and the National Iranian Oil Products Distribution Company are also on the list 67 Iranian Oil Terminals Co a division of the National Iranian Oil Co has four transport hubs that load more than 2 000 oil tankers per year 68 Iran is to target foreign investment in its energy sector by creating an umbrella group of nearly 50 state run firms and listing its shares on four international stock exchanges Under the privatization plan 47 oil and gas companies including PetroIran and North Drilling Company worth an estimated 90 billion are to be privatized on the Tehran Stock Exchange by 2014 69 70 Iran s National Petrochemical Company NPC plans to privatize 17 companies by the end of 2007 71 Forty percent of those shares will go to Justice Shares for underprivileged citizens in Iran 20 will be allocated to NPC 35 will be put on sale on the Tehran Stock Exchange and the remaining 5 will go the petrochemical industry personnel The 20 percent allocated to the NPC is meant to support petrochemical industry projects but may be offered to the private sector in the future 72 89 6 percent of Shiraz Petrochemical Complex and 27 76 percent of Petrochemical Investment Company will be sold to the public in June 2009 73 All shares of domestic petrochemical firms will be offered to the public in the frame of a holding company by the end of Iranian year ending March 21 2010 74 As part of the 2010 Iranian Economic Reform Plan petrochemical companies which use natural gas as their feedstock rather than fuel will pay no more than 65 of the average export price rather than 75 for the general population for a period of 10 years Iran also projects to privatize some of its oil refineries 2009 57 73 75 76 Isfahan Bandar Abbas Tabriz Shiraz Kermanshah Lavan and Tehran Shahid Tondgouyan oil refineries will be transferred to the private sector but the ownership of Abadan and Arak oil refineries will remain in government control 64 The government of Iran announced in 2017 that a vast majority of the country s 3 600 gas and diesel stations along with 2 400 CNG stations would be privatized in order improve service and raise accountability On August 8 2017 a European firm based jointly in Greece and Romania announced it was planning to commercialize a number of stations The deal is expected to grow economic ties between the EU and Iran 77 See also edit nbsp Iran portal nbsp Economics portalOrganization for Collection and Sale of State owned Properties of Iran OCSSPI Economy of Iran International Rankings of Iran in Economy Iranian Economic Reform Plan Labor and tax laws in Iran List of Major Iranian Companies Next Eleven Tehran Stock Exchange Transition economyReferences edit Iran Supreme Leader calls for acceleration of privatization program Payvand com Archived from the original on 3 October 2018 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Description of Selected News Archived from the original on 8 March 2007 Retrieved 8 February 2016 a b Archived copy Archived from the original on 30 September 2020 Retrieved 25 December 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as 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Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Iran Daily Domestic Economy 07 01 09 Archived from the original on 6 July 2009 Retrieved 16 May 2010 Iran Daily Domestic Economy 08 06 09 www iran daily com Archived from the original on 8 August 2009 Retrieved 15 January 2022 Iran s oil terminals move to private hands UPI com 21 September 2009 Archived from the original on 21 October 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Iran Daily Domestic Economy 02 10 08 Archived February 14 2008 at the Wayback Machine Iranian North Drilling Company to go public 100225 2009 06 Steelguru com Archived from the original on 30 June 2009 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Iran to privatize 17 petrochemical companies by March 20 Archived from the original on 19 February 2008 Retrieved 5 November 2022 40 of Iran s petrochemical industry to be privatized as justice shares Payvand com Archived from the original on 8 February 2012 Retrieved 5 February 2012 a b Leveraging Energy Resources iran daily com Archived from the original on 21 May 2009 Retrieved 7 September 2016 Petrochemical industry to be fully privatized tehran times 28 July 2009 Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Iran plans privatizing oil refineries Tehran Times 10 April 2009 Archived from the original on 14 June 2011 Retrieved 5 February 2012 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 6 March 2012 Retrieved 27 December 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link European Firm Poised to Run Iranian Gas Stations 7 August 2017 Archived from the original on 17 August 2017 Retrieved 17 August 2017 External links editPrivatization Organization of Iran in Persian and English affiliated with the Ministry of Economy and Finance With latest info on the companies being privatized including regulations List of Companies that have already been approved for privatization early 2007 Federation of Euro Asian Stock Exchanges Archived 14 December 2013 at archive today Tehran Stock Exchange statistics listing requirement regulations operations comparisons and latest news including IPOs Iran Industrial Management Company in Persian Top 100 Iranian companies list Economy and Business in Iran at CurliePress articlesPrivatization of Public Goods in the Islamic Republic by Kaveh Ehsani Law in Force Iran Daily Pros and Cons of Privatization Iran Daily Privatization and Structure of Iran s Transportation System 2000 Privatization of State Owned Enterprises in Iran Panacea or Prescription for Disaster By Dr Ali Mostashari Iran Inflation privatization lead intensify working class struggles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Privatization in Iran amp oldid 1175944860 Mines amp metals, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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