Business Experts Predict Decent Growth in 2015, 2016

International business research groups and organizations are predicting economic growth in Iran after the country reached an agreement with the P5+1 (the five permanent members of UN Security Council plus Germany) on July 14 in Vienna to limit its nuclear program in exchange for the relief of economic sanctions imposed by the UN Securit Council, the United States and the European Union.

International business research groups and organizations are predicting economic growth in Iran after the country reached an agreement with the P5+1 (the five permanent members of UN Security Council plus Germany) on July 14 in Vienna to limit its nuclear program in exchange for the relief of economic sanctions imposed by the UN Securit Council, the United States and the European Union.
Business Monitor International market research group recently published a report into the Iranian economy and the effect that the end of the relief from sanctions will have on the country in the coming years. Meanwhile, economists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch also published a lengthy report on July 15, predicting huge opportunities for the country's economy after sanctions are lifted.
In a report, Iranian Privatization Organization (IPO) quotes from Financial Tribune:
BMI has predicted that Iran's economy will grow following the relaxation of sanctions, forecasting real growth in gross domestic product of 0.6% and 2.9% in 2015 and 2016 respectively. BMI’s forecast is much more moderate than the Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s which predicted that stronger oil production and sanctions relief could bring Iran’s real GDP growth to 6-7% in the short-term, Business Insider reported.
“With the injection of cash and higher oil exports, the deal would not only boost domestic economic activities, but the spill-over effects for its main trade partners could be substantial as sanctions are lifted,” wrote the BAML’s report.
BMI’s played-down growth forecast could be explained by its prediction that globally low oil prices will play a key role in limiting the impact of the unwinding of sanctions on Iran’s economy. BMI forecasts oil prices to average $59 per barrel in 2015 and $61 per barrel in 2016 as a result of global oversupply, which will in turn ensure government spending and private consumption growth to be relatively low.
BMI expects fixed investment and exports to increasingly become important drivers of growth, while the easing of financial sanctions will also facilitate project finance and attract foreign investment into the infrastructure sector.
BMI also predicts that net exports will see a modest rise as oil exports are gradually allowed as of the first quarter of 2016. The report estimates that Iran could bring back on line some 550,000-650,000 barrels per day of additional crude oil production in the one-to-two years following a lifting of oil sanctions, in contrast to a more mainstream expectation of additional output capacity of 1 million barrels per day shortly after the lifting of sanctions.
Privatization plans were part of the Fifth Five-Year Economic Development Plan (2011-2016). The government recently announced the transfer of about $330 million worth of shares of state-run companies to the private sector.

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