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Internet shutdown in Iran costing already ailing economy $4.3 million a day: officials

internet-shutdown-in-iran-costing-already-ailing-economy-$4.3-million-a-day:-officials
Internet shutdown in Iran costing already ailing economy $4.3 million a day: officials

Iran’s already ailing economy is suffering another blow amid the most comprehensive internet shutdown in its history, with officials warning Tuesday that it is costing the country $2.8 million to $4.3 million each day.

Ehsan Chitsaz, a deputy minister of communications and information technology, said that since the internet shutdown began on Jan. 8, the country was losing millions-a-day in lost commerce revenue.

NetBlocks, an internet monitoring group analyzing the effects of the shutdown, warned that the cost could actually be as high as $37 million a day.

Iranians walk through the Grand Bazaar in Tehran, with shops displaying homeware and accessories.

Iran’s ailing economy is losing millions of dollars a day amid a nationwide internet shutdown, which shows no sign of letting up. AFP via Getty Images

The Islamic Republic launched a nationwide communications shutdown on Jan. 8 as a means to suppress the anti-government protests that gripped the country.

There remains to be no official word on when access to the internet will return to the masses, with commerce plummeting at a time when inflation is high and the value of the national currency is low.

The value of the Iranian rial crashed last month, with the currency falling to over 1.4 million to the US dollar.

The low value of the rial pushed up inflation and increased the cost of everyday goods and necessities in the country.

Protesters dancing around a bonfire in Tehran, Iran.

Protests erupted across Iran against the government’s failure to fix the economy in the face of high inflation and plummeting rial value. AP

The economic woes were then compounded by changes in gasoline prices, leading to public outrage against the regime that resulted in the mass protests starting on Dec. 28.

In the face of such widespread dissent, the regime shut off access to the internet, a tactic that leaves a major blow on the national economy.

A woman shops for handbags and wallets in the Grand Bazaar in Tehran.

Business owners in Tehran say they’ve seen a massive drop in sales since the protests and subsequent crackdown. AFP via Getty Images

During the last widespread protests in 2022 over the murder of Mahsa Amini in police custody, the internet outage ended up costing Iran $1.6 billion, according to Dara Conduit, a lecturer at the University of Melbourne in Australia who studied the event.

Businesses in Tehran said they were already feeling the blow of the internet outage, with one pet shop owner saying business has already dropped by 90%.

Without access to the internet the business owner, who spoke under anonymity for fear of reprisal, said she lost a valuable tool to sell and promote her products.

“Those who pass by our shops don’t show any appetite for shopping,” the owner of an upscale tailor shop in Tehran added. “We are just paying our regular expenses, electricity and staff … but in return, we don’t have anything.”

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