The Iraq economic boom
Newsweek:
Don Surber in his post on this story notes that the Iraqis are more optimistic about their economy and Americans are. Of course that is because they do not have to read the US media telling them how bad things are all the time. As long as their si a Republican in office the media will focus on gloom and doom in the US economy, what ever the reality is, as well as gloom and doom in Iraq where they want the US to lose.
Jan. 1, 2007 issue - It may sound unreal, given the daily images of carnage and chaos. But for a certain plucky breed of businessmen, there's good money to be made in Iraq. Consider Iraqna, the leading mobile-phone company. For sure, its quarterly reports seldom make for dull reading. Despite employees kidnapped, cell-phone towers bombed, storefronts shot up and a huge security budget—up to four guards for each employee—the company posted revenues of $333 million in 2005. This year, it's on track to take in $520 million. The U.S. State Department reports that there are now 7.1 million mobile-phone subscribers in Iraq, up from just 1.4 million two years ago. Says Wael Ziada, an analyst in Cairo who tracks Iraqna: "There will always be pockets of money and wealth, no matter how bad the situation gets."How did this story slip past the editors? Isn't this what the troops have been saying all along? Why is it now only coming out in the main stream media? My guess is the reporters were told to do a report on what a mess the Iraq economy was and they found something entirely different. Thankfully, they had the integrity to report it anyway.
Civil war or not, Iraq has an economy, and—mother of all surprises—it's doing remarkably well. Real estate is booming. Construction, retail and wholesale trade sectors are healthy, too, according to a report by Global Insight in London. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce reports 34,000 registered companies in Iraq, up from 8,000 three years ago. Sales of secondhand cars, televisions and mobile phones have all risen sharply. Estimates vary, but one from Global Insight puts GDP growth at 17 percent last year and projects 13 percent for 2006. The World Bank has it lower: at 4 percent this year. But, given all the attention paid to deteriorating security, the startling fact is that Iraq is growing at all.
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... there's a vibrancy at the grass roots that is invisible in most international coverage of Iraq. Partly it's the trickle-down effect. However it's spent, whether on security or something else, money circulates. Nor are ordinary Iraqis themselves short on cash. After so many years of living under sanctions, with little to consume, many built up considerable nest eggs—which they are now spending. That's boosted economic activity, particularly in retail. Imported goods have grown increasingly affordable, thanks to the elimination of tariffs and trade barriers. Salaries have gone up more than 100 percent since the fall of Saddam, and income-tax cuts (from 45 percent to just 15 percent) have put more cash in Iraqi pockets. "The U.S. wanted to create the conditions in which small-scale private enterprise could blossom," says Jan Randolph, head of sovereign risk at Global Insight. "In a sense, they've succeeded."
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Don Surber in his post on this story notes that the Iraqis are more optimistic about their economy and Americans are. Of course that is because they do not have to read the US media telling them how bad things are all the time. As long as their si a Republican in office the media will focus on gloom and doom in the US economy, what ever the reality is, as well as gloom and doom in Iraq where they want the US to lose.
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