Iran's Economy Could Be Huge, But They Don't Care 🇮🇷

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  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024

Комментарии • 4,4 тыс.

  • @EconomicsExplained
    @EconomicsExplained  Год назад +96

    This video wouldn't have been possible without the support of our Patreon community. Join here➡ www.patreon.com/EconomicsExplained

    • @persianguy1524
      @persianguy1524 Год назад +3

      Irans gdp is 1.8 trillion and gdp per capita is 23 thousand according to IMF. Where did you get your source?

    • @olagunjujoseph213
      @olagunjujoseph213 Год назад +1

      Please do an analysis of Nigeria's economy

    • @gemabbas
      @gemabbas Год назад +3

      You have fake video..remove restrictions and see

    • @gemabbas
      @gemabbas Год назад

      Check the ranking aerospace, medical

    • @tazali78
      @tazali78 Год назад +2

      Standing with the truth why we accept their laws we have our own culture religion

  • @amirnaderi4615
    @amirnaderi4615 Год назад +6459

    as an iranian you have no idea how painful it is to live with this knowledge everyday.

    • @045jerson7
      @045jerson7 Год назад +279

      That is so painful to hear 🥺💔. I Hope everything works out for ur country and it's people and the current political system just fades into history .

    • @kunalghosh8852
      @kunalghosh8852 Год назад +149

      why don't you guys revolt against the current regime in your country?

    • @secrets.295
      @secrets.295 Год назад +534

      ​@@kunalghosh8852 These revolt ideas sound so promising until they actually happen. Look at Egypt, Libya, Syria, etc. Is it better than before? Sometimes keeping the status quo is better than the alternatives.

    • @mehranmoradi4608
      @mehranmoradi4608 Год назад +376

      @@kunalghosh8852 Because those who hate the regime are the minorities supported by the West and the majority like the regime and understand that the current economic situation was not caused by the regime but by the cruel sanctions imposed by the West to harm the Iranians.

    • @Tmb1112
      @Tmb1112 Год назад

      @@mehranmoradi4608yeah… that’s just not true. Objectively, the strikes that cripple that country and protests in every city are not being done by “a minority” 😂

  • @user-lq5yx1ke5k
    @user-lq5yx1ke5k Год назад +2863

    One thing you haven't talked about is huge brain drain that Iran suffers from. A lot of people fled after the 1979 revolution, and people continue to flee because of the terrible regime and poor economic conditions that the country suffers from.

    • @master2002h
      @master2002h Год назад

      shia drain everything

    • @liamthomas8029
      @liamthomas8029 Год назад +217

      Fr though most of the professors and a good amount of the PhD students at my Canadian university were Iranians.

    • @menotfunnyclips8982
      @menotfunnyclips8982 Год назад +8

      The biggest problem maybe us Boikot

    • @Dakidpepe
      @Dakidpepe Год назад

      Only the dumb & poor stay cause the smart ones usually get killed by the government.

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Год назад +16

      ​@@liamthomas8029 Most of the professors?? That's interesting 😆

  • @liamtahaney713
    @liamtahaney713 Год назад +1937

    I have a surprisingly large number of iranian friends. They love their country, and hate the regime. Awesome people, i feel very sorry for them.

    • @eduwino151
      @eduwino151 Год назад +1

      Persians are educated unlike the cruder Saudis who only rely on oil, a free iran would be in the top 10 economic powerhouse

    • @dave4deputyZX
      @dave4deputyZX Год назад +1

      True, the iranian political system is fucked up.
      But if you talk to Americans, they also generally hate their government, and look how angry the french are too. People hating the system is almost universal 😄

    • @jayclarke6671
      @jayclarke6671 Год назад +130

      Yes the Iranians I've met abroad who are not a fan of their fundamentalist regime are usually very nice and down to earth.

    • @brunomoura7719
      @brunomoura7719 Год назад +82

      Lands of brave people , great researchers, a huge cultural History and so many resources. Lands of ancient civilizations. My best regards to people of Iran! I hope you may find peace and prosperity very soon.

    • @taz1712
      @taz1712 Год назад +23

      We hate our regimes in the west too but what are any of us going to do about anything, nothing.

  • @popowere
    @popowere 11 месяцев назад +29

    That shows that even if in the best situation ever, if leadership sucks, it sucks

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 10 месяцев назад

      Pakistan is one example of this.

  • @Archangelm127
    @Archangelm127 Год назад +2113

    To me, Iran's history since 1900 is an embodiment of the phrase "this is why we can't have nice things." :(

    • @master2002h
      @master2002h Год назад +86

      the bad history started with shia🥲

    • @sharki4341
      @sharki4341 Год назад +105

      ​@@master2002h actually Safavid dynasty was not that bad its all started with Qajar

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Год назад +11

      It's actually since 1800

    • @Houthiandtheblowfish
      @Houthiandtheblowfish Год назад

      All the resource rich countries from likes of iran, iraq, venezuela, aghanistan, russia and many more were plagued with one disease...
      USA 😁

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Год назад +75

      The Qajar dynasty is rightly seen is one of Iran’s worst dynasties, comparable to the late Qing dynasty of China.

  • @Astillion
    @Astillion Год назад +686

    Iran has been at the center of some of the worlds most prosperous and successful empires. That's not an accident. Iran has always had great potential. And when it was able to utilize it, it was the regional superpower.

    • @pouyabahrami7669
      @pouyabahrami7669 Год назад +18

      True. It is now the regional superpower. Let's not forget the Saudis accepted defeat and withdrew from all regional conflicts. That includes accepting Iran's regional allies and leaving Lebanon to Iran. Good or bad, that is the reality omitted from our understanding. And we are still at the very infancy of Iran's massive expansion. Not only the North-South Corridor was just finalized, The East-West corridor going from Iran to Iraq to Syria and Lebanon just got finalized. I think the religious government will go by the way side over time.

    • @kaushiksahu5646
      @kaushiksahu5646 Год назад +31

      It's still a regional superpower despite all the Illligal sanctions imposed on them by the US.

    • @Khaled91
      @Khaled91 Год назад +4

      Iran has the lowest fertility rate in the entire middle east. The bad state of the economy is what many Iranians cite as a reason for that. What's interesting is that the poorest region (Sistan & Balochistan) in Iran has the highest fertility rate inside the country. There are many poor countries in Africa, yet they have high fertility rates. Neighbouring Afghanistan has been unstable for 50 years, yet they have high fertility rates. Strange!

    • @soljr9175
      @soljr9175 Год назад +10

      @@Khaled91 because of education since 80s. Same in Tehran

    • @zack2804
      @zack2804 Год назад +15

      @@Khaled91 There's nothing strange about it. There's often a direct correlation between poverty and high fertility rates, and there are many studies that show it.

  • @AndrewL31413
    @AndrewL31413 Год назад +380

    Iran probably had a crazy amount of untapped Human Resources as well. I’m always astonished to meet Iranians who I hold in very high esteem in terms of talent and intelligence.

    • @Redmenace96
      @Redmenace96 Год назад +36

      perfect comment. Maybe I'm lucky, but every Iranian I meet is honorable, intelligent, and hard-working.
      P.S. is that racist?

    • @j.r.8176
      @j.r.8176 Год назад +4

      ​@@Redmenace96If someone deems you the wrong skin color they will label you racist regardless of what you say 😂

    • @keyreeves4631
      @keyreeves4631 Год назад +4

      @@Redmenace96Nothing racist about this statement

    • @Dont_Tread_on_Me448
      @Dont_Tread_on_Me448 Год назад +2

      ​@@Redmenace96 why ?? Are you scared that someone's gonna cancel you ?? Are you scared that you're gonna "offend" someone ??

    • @UserOfTheName
      @UserOfTheName Год назад

      @@Redmenace96 Only if you consider saying Canadians are nice as being racist, your fine and for one I agree have never met or heard of an Iranian person who didn't seem like a chill stand up person

  • @mattnoel2447
    @mattnoel2447 Год назад +230

    It also has immense cultural assets and incredible scenery, it could be a leading tourist destination. I'd love to visit one day!

    • @MishMash22
      @MishMash22 Год назад +3

      Me too.

    • @scch4056
      @scch4056 11 месяцев назад

      please dont go, chances are high you can be held hostage by the government and they label you as "spy".....it happened to many foreigners.

    • @sd4545sdf
      @sd4545sdf 11 месяцев назад

      Russia dont need visa to visit Iran now

    • @tariver1693
      @tariver1693 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@sd4545sdfOnly for organized groups arranged by certain operators. Only a few groups have visited Iran this way.
      But visa for Iran is really easy to get, you just fill an online form and get your visa at the consulate.
      Very nice country and really nice people, I hope they will prosper in the future.

    • @KleptomaniacJames
      @KleptomaniacJames 10 месяцев назад +1

      Everywhere has "immense cultural assets" it will need a bit more than that.

  • @cyrusii2746
    @cyrusii2746 Год назад +790

    Nobody in the world can feel the frustration of having a lot potential to grow and not being able to as much as an Iranian.
    It pains me everyday to see all this talent go to waste. Ever since I started to understand myself and my place in the world, I became angrier ,more depressed everyday. Today I'm at a place that I'm willing to give my life in the hope of slightes change.

    • @mehranmoradi4608
      @mehranmoradi4608 Год назад +1

      Blame the West for sanctioning your people and stopping them from building their economy.

    • @MartyFox
      @MartyFox Год назад +65

      A Brazilian might. As De Gaulle said, “Brazil is the country of the future... and always will be.”

    • @cyrusii2746
      @cyrusii2746 Год назад +92

      @@MartyFox I also believe Brazil is a nation with great potential and very bright future but the painful thing in iran is that there are a group of people who in the name of religion are bringing misery to our country.

    • @chrish2230
      @chrish2230 Год назад +20

      Ive made some great friends from Iran, and it is always rough to see the mixture of pain and love in their expression/eyes when talking about home. I hope that you can all live to see the day when changes happen!

    • @NahintheW
      @NahintheW Год назад +14

      @@cyrusii2746 You are cute for thinking its because of reiligion

  • @Juan_lauda
    @Juan_lauda Год назад +390

    I had an Iranian Uber driver once - he was in his 70s.
    He told me that all he had ever wanted all his life was to own a record shop in Tehran, which he did when he was a young man.
    After the revolution- the islamists came and set fire to his shop and tortured him for liking music.

    • @Kuricang31
      @Kuricang31 Год назад +46

      Those are fakes lol. I've been to Iran multiple times and I still seeing young women blasting pop/rock music in the middle of the park each day with no law enforcement ever came and arrested them

    • @normallyChallenged
      @normallyChallenged Год назад +239

      ​@@Kuricang31 The guy lived through the Islamic revolution. Things were waaaay different back then.

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Год назад +77

      @@normallyChallenged and the first decade of the Islamic Republic was rough: war with Iraq, and a crackdown at home.

    • @JitzyJT
      @JitzyJT Год назад +24

      Iran has music and dance....Just that the women are not allowed to enjoy it in public...But things are changing....There is fear in the mullahs of constant uprisings....So they kind of letting some changes....

    • @lukaurushadze3606
      @lukaurushadze3606 Год назад +79

      @@Kuricang31 the fact that you saw some woman listening to music, doesn't mean that others haven't been prosecuted for doing the same.

  • @QuantumAscension1
    @QuantumAscension1 Год назад +131

    Nations need educated people to be successful, but educated people make poor loyalists to an authoritarian state. It’s either the great limiter or downfall of authoritarians

    • @LD-Orbs
      @LD-Orbs Год назад +15

      Limiter in this case. Also, in the case of Russia, North Korea... and, increasingly, China.

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Год назад +13

      Which is why the Iranian government is rife with nepotism, particularly under the current hardline presidency

    • @xxxBradTxxx
      @xxxBradTxxx Год назад

      Probably why Pol Pot killed all the educated people

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Год назад +17

      @@LD-Orbs Russia, China and Iran all have educated populations. And their regimes are holding. Sounds like this simplistic schema doesn't quite match reality.

    • @QuantumAscension1
      @QuantumAscension1 Год назад +17

      @@ArawnOfAnnwn "Educated" doesn't just mean academic-competence. unhindered access and flow of information and communication, encouragement of competitiveness and individual initiative in a work environment, and unrestricted limitations on creativity and opinion all contribute to an intelligent and "educated" people. Russia, China, and Iran fail on some or all of those principles.

  • @Ichani1
    @Ichani1 Год назад +79

    To be fair, Iran didnt break the agreement regarding atomic weapon Production. The US did. Why should Iran then adhere to an already broken agreement?

    • @joemacmillan
      @joemacmillan Год назад +5

      I agree. Iran needs to stay poor and be in the right side of history.

    • @erfanehtesham7353
      @erfanehtesham7353 Год назад

      These people are getting paid to run regime propaganda by just saying pure BS no Iranian believe. We all trust US more than mullahs. I mean yeah a foreign country this is how disgusting are these people ruling over Iran.

    • @Johngamer2418
      @Johngamer2418 Год назад +12

      surely this is sarcasm@@joemacmillan

    • @ahmedelkhwaga2751
      @ahmedelkhwaga2751 9 месяцев назад +5

      Jew​@@joemacmillan

    • @LogosTheos
      @LogosTheos 3 месяца назад

      They did break the agreement. Mossad agents from Israel stole nuclear files from Iran in 2018 that showed they were lying 😂

  • @alienx4560
    @alienx4560 Год назад +205

    Thank God this time he got the right stock footage of Iran.

    • @SuperWarningShot
      @SuperWarningShot Год назад +40

      I’m pretty sure that’s Istanbul at around 2:24

    • @secrets.295
      @secrets.295 Год назад +19

      @@SuperWarningShot It's just lazy research. It's not that hard to find an actual image of Iranian cities lol.

    • @master2002h
      @master2002h Год назад

      get rid of the shia so you can fix your country

    • @alienx4560
      @alienx4560 Год назад +1

      @@secrets.295 True

    • @farhan3296
      @farhan3296 Год назад +19

      @@secrets.295 if the stock footage provider has tagged that as "Iran", most youtubers on this planet wouldn’t be able to tell otherwise. The world doesn't revolve around us.

  • @jaja3359
    @jaja3359 Год назад +201

    Its just like Russia, mismanagement is huge and their people pay the price

    • @highdefinist9697
      @highdefinist9697 Год назад +29

      Yeah - it seems that the combination of an authoritarian regime, and a selfish group of oligarchs creates a "stable nightmare" with no escape, and no room for improvement, because more or less everyone who has any say in the destiny of the country has a strong incentive to prevent change.

    • @rogink
      @rogink Год назад +11

      Good point - both Russia and Iran seem to have very good education systems. That is supposed to be the number one driver for economic success

    • @Hilariusgamer
      @Hilariusgamer Год назад +21

      @@rogink yes but just education is not so useful without incentives for innovation and brain drain. They have educated people but not any real products.

    • @asktheetruscans9857
      @asktheetruscans9857 Год назад +24

      ​@@rogink the missing ingredients are freedom and free markets.

    • @ArawnOfAnnwn
      @ArawnOfAnnwn Год назад +7

      @@highdefinist9697 Their political system isn't all that's holding them back you know - even the video acknowledged that. Funny how comments focus on that that needs to change tho. Oh of course the US is just the nice guy who'll make it up to them if they only change their whole nation to suit it. Right... Iran can still be better aplenty right now even with its current political system if the US stopped undermining it. Plus ironically increased wealth may very well help change that system, but keeping it in poverty has achieved the opposite. Serves American geopolitical goals tho...😒

  • @selenajack2036
    @selenajack2036 Год назад +564

    What we are seeing global inflation. I saw it in the news that most countries are all competing for parts, products, food etc. Even nations that managed their rates better are seeing major issues. The glut of money was an issue sure, but the surging demand from nation that re-opened from covid lockdowns played a larger role. Add to this pandemic-related staffing issues, Russia-Ukraine Conflict and the intentional global oil supply problems and its a nightmare.

    • @bsetdays6784
      @bsetdays6784 Год назад +6

      Investing is the only way to make your money grow and unless you have an exceptionally high income, invessting is the only way most people will ever have enough money to retire. Reason I work with ‘’ Patrice Carol Rainer’’ a brokerage-advsor who sets asset allocation that fits my tolerance and r!sk capacity, investmnt horizon, present and future goals.

    • @africanboi4542
      @africanboi4542 Год назад +5

      @@bsetdays6784 Even if you have a humongous income you still need to draw up futuristic plans because anything can happen. One could lose one's job or whatever. Investment cannot be overemphasized. About your advisor, how does one reach pls

    • @bsetdays6784
      @bsetdays6784 Год назад +3

      @@africanboi4542 ​It's best you do your due diligence, I have my portfolio overseen by “ELEANOR ANNETTE ECKHAUS” and her qualifications speak for itself. Most likely, the internet is where to find basic info, she has a noticeable page for consulting.

    • @cloudyblaze7916
      @cloudyblaze7916 Год назад +2

      Thank you for this tip. it was easy to find Eleanor Annette your coach. Did my due diligence on her before scheduling a phone call with her. She seems proficient considering her résumé.

    • @shaahinrapsong
      @shaahinrapsong Год назад +1

      we have 15 - 25 % inflation every "Month"
      one day i will dicide to end my l.i.f,e .
      but i will take some of dictator mad dogs with me

  • @greggf6831
    @greggf6831 Год назад +126

    Many countries blame foreign enemies for their failure but it's Iran who is their own worst enemy

    • @payambeigi1689
      @payambeigi1689 11 месяцев назад +22

      Mullahs to be accurate

    • @SamadKhan-gt4hd
      @SamadKhan-gt4hd 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@payambeigi1689America 🇺🇸

    • @24mojoe
      @24mojoe 8 месяцев назад

      Not true! Western powers bullies are the enemies! Comply or else! I don't think you would love to lead a life of slaves under corrupt masters!.

    • @VafaFerdowsians
      @VafaFerdowsians 7 месяцев назад

      Iran s enemy is USA , France, Great Britain. They deposed the shah when he was monopolizing the oil there and keeping it for the Iranians and not giving it away. They brought in the Ayatollahs. The people are powerless to do anything without weapons. Know ur history …

    • @nawnaw4709
      @nawnaw4709 5 месяцев назад

      yeah it's decently not the sanctions...

  • @BaiZhijie
    @BaiZhijie Год назад +294

    What makes all of this worse is you only get a "demographic dividend" once. Iran has a huge bulge of 30 somethings (my generation). But many fewer kids and teenagers. You need to go go go while your labor force is young. The ideal time to liberalize would have been 2000 or 2010, because then liberalization could have paired with a youth dividend to kick the economy into hyper-drive. If the people have to wait until the 2040s for real reform, that golden opportunity will be over. This is so frustrating and awful in terms of wasted human potential!!!

    • @beback_
      @beback_ Год назад +34

      This makes Khamenei one of the top three villains in milennia of Iranian history.

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Год назад

      Instead, Khamenei and Ahmadinejad stole Iran’s future, with the 2009 election, and the 2011 corruption scandals.

    • @jacobfield3951
      @jacobfield3951 Год назад +3

      Thank you for mentioning such an under appreciated problem.

    • @agentdanish
      @agentdanish Год назад +3

      Not unless they all have 4 kids to kick the can down the road

    • @pouyabahrami7669
      @pouyabahrami7669 Год назад +9

      Even this video says Iran was the fastest growing economy in the world until 2012. That is most of the post-revolutionary period. So, they did take advantage of what you are saying without "liberalization." That doesn't get highlighted, of course.

  • @lanetomkow6885
    @lanetomkow6885 Год назад +35

    We all know the main reason. Brain Drain......
    I'm in my mid-thirties. The amount of similar aged men and women I've met which have left Iran is high. They are usually very well spoken and educated.

    • @donpetrossi
      @donpetrossi Год назад +4

      But even if those people stayed, what would they be doing? How do we know their productivity would be properly utilized? That the incentives would be setup to make them boost "growth"? Maybe it's part of the issue, but how do we know it's the main one?

    • @beback_
      @beback_ Год назад +6

      @@donpetrossi It wouldn't. Iranians think they're the laziest people in the world, and that stereotype would absolutely be confirmed if you walk into any government office in Tehran. Yet when they migrate to developed countries they work very hard.

    • @donpetrossi
      @donpetrossi Год назад +4

      @@beback_ yeah that's what I was thinking. Brain drain implies all the skilled people leave, which impairs the country by leaving only unskilled people. While I'm sure most skilled people want to leave, not all of them can, which means you still have lots of skilled people unable to realize their full utility or potential due to the other limitations in Iran like corruption and sanctions, etc. So seems like brain drain is a secondary issue..

    • @aungmyintoo4635
      @aungmyintoo4635 Год назад +4

      I think there is a lot of educated and good quality people in Iran itself, only that they have no money to get out from the country.

    • @syncopatedfeb4770
      @syncopatedfeb4770 Год назад +1

      and rest of iranians are not? lol

  • @ADBProductions_
    @ADBProductions_ Год назад +235

    Iran looks so beautiful, the nature and architecture there looks very nice. You add in amazing history, and Iran has a ton of potential as a tourist destination

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 Год назад +28

      Yes, of course it does. Iran's gov't will have to stop keeping some tourists hostage. 😉🤪

    • @someboi4535
      @someboi4535 Год назад

      @@paulheydarian1281 toursist? you mean western spies

    • @HughJass-jv2lt
      @HughJass-jv2lt Год назад +1

      This CHANNEL Fuch'ing *FAILED* on this one.
      🤣🤣
      IRAN was already living in "The FUTURE" back in 1950.
      Read about Prime Minister *Mohammed Mossadegh*
      and learn what _WESTERN EUROPEONS_ did to this country 🔥🔥🔥🔥

    • @Redmenace96
      @Redmenace96 Год назад +5

      HUGE! potential. I almost took a chance to visit 5 years ago.Chickened out. It is the Cradle of Civilization.

    • @mr.ripley86
      @mr.ripley86 Год назад +9

      ​@@Redmenace96 Actually, the craddle of civilization is Iraq/Summer, not Iran.

  • @mahditaherifard9981
    @mahditaherifard9981 Год назад +223

    I'm a 28yo Iranian living in Tehran. I found most of the information in this video accurate except the one about women's employment here. Amongst my friends, most girls above the age of 20 are employed... yes, it's only anecdotal, but it's what I've observed around myself.(I have 2 sisters who are both employed, but I'm between jobs myself😂)

    • @codenameeaglecooldown900
      @codenameeaglecooldown900 Год назад +3

      Not funny at all

    • @mahditaherifard9981
      @mahditaherifard9981 Год назад +40

      @@codenameeaglecooldown900 are you Iranian?

    • @reza5347
      @reza5347 Год назад +16

      There is definitely a huge amount of discrimination against women who wish to work that can't be denied, for example women cannot be chosen as majority of leadership jobs at all, alongside being a judge. they also need permission from their husband to work.

    • @ms.m6060
      @ms.m6060 Год назад +4

      Bc they are paid less than men

    • @ms.m6060
      @ms.m6060 Год назад

      @@codenameeaglecooldown900 he must be crazy

  • @thecrimsondragon9744
    @thecrimsondragon9744 Год назад +110

    'Relatively well-educated'. I would say they are extremely well-educated. Levels of education in Iran match those of developed countries. I work in Higher Education in the UK and it's impressive the number of Iranians I see coming here for postgraduate studies and a rare occasion when they don't meet the entry requirements for their desired course (they generally perform academically very well with high grades).

    • @outlawfly664
      @outlawfly664 Год назад +44

      Even here in Sweden, Iranians are by far the most educated ethnic group in the country. Per capita Iranians exceed even Swedes in higher education. Even other countries with strong Iranian immigrant base like the US, Iranian-Americans are amongst the most highly educated ethnic groups. I work in the fields of IT, been to Silicon valley, pretty much most of the current CEOs and founders are either Iranians or Indians, the founders from Ebay to Drop box are Iranians. Even looking at India that has large number themselves, the Parsi community is by far the most successful domestically. It's a shame what Iran could've been.

    • @mth469
      @mth469 Год назад +24

      That's because you are seeing the cream 🍦 of the crop.

    • @mostafakhademi4654
      @mostafakhademi4654 Год назад

      one fun question ! iran has a bad and crazy government, right ?! so why there are so many well-educated peoples ?
      how about another one ? if the government wants the people to be quiet and dumb so they can't question their incompetence, how's that there are spending so much money on education that their levels of education in match those of developed countries ?

    • @sidy6526
      @sidy6526 Год назад +9

      @@outlawfly664
      Yep those parsi community people from Persia are very successful here. Most of them reside in Mumbai , india's financial capital. And many of them are billionaire. As compared to their small population of just few thousands , their share in India's billionaire list is huge .
      Even the Tata company who own TCS and Jaguar land lower was started by a parsi , jamshedji tata .

    • @marina12345678911000
      @marina12345678911000 Год назад +2

      @@outlawfly664 that statement is not true. While there are certainly individuals of Iranian and Indian descent who have made significant contributions in the technology industry, it is incorrect to claim that "pretty much most" of the current CEOs and founders in Silicon Valley are Iranians or Indians.
      Silicon Valley is a diverse and multicultural hub that attracts talented individuals from around the world, including people from various backgrounds and nationalities. Many successful companies and startups in Silicon Valley have been founded by individuals from different countries and ethnicities.

  • @onkelreje173
    @onkelreje173 Год назад +37

    2:54 Iran didnt chose to go to war, Iraq invaded them not the other way around

    • @Houthiandtheblowfish
      @Houthiandtheblowfish Год назад

      All the resource rich countries from likes of iran, iraq, venezuela, aghanistan, russia and many more were plagued with one disease...
      USA 😁

    • @onkelreje173
      @onkelreje173 Год назад +1

      @Parsa_afshar Yeah but they still didnt choose to go to war

    • @mth469
      @mth469 Год назад

      ​@@onkelreje173
      Supposedly they were financing a Shia uprising in Iraq prior to the war ?
      I'm not sure.

    • @onkelreje173
      @onkelreje173 Год назад +5

      @Parsa_afshar my point still stands THEY DIDNT CHOOSE IT Iraq wanted oil and was scared of revolution BUT Iran DIDNT choose to go to war it was DEFENSIVE

    • @syncopatedfeb4770
      @syncopatedfeb4770 Год назад

      @@imaginaryfriend1 bullshit, west wouldn't give up. iraq was a puppet i diot lol

  • @sebastianmorales9787
    @sebastianmorales9787 Год назад +77

    Would be VERY interesting to see Chile been analyzed, considering: current crisis in terms of political uncertainty (constitutional change on its way), but also having HUGE potential on key industries for the near future: copper (largest industry in the country, and main producer worldwide), lithium (on path to match copper) and green hydrogen

    • @JitzyJT
      @JitzyJT Год назад +1

      Didn't you guys elected a communsit govt?

    • @varunmittal3617
      @varunmittal3617 Год назад +1

      No benefit if locals don't get jobs.

    • @OshinAttari
      @OshinAttari Год назад +1

      Iran Become 1st Lithium Reserve of the World
      Chile isn't 1st anymore

    • @tsubadaikhan6332
      @tsubadaikhan6332 Год назад +7

      @@JitzyJT There's many Governments that lean Left without being Communist. I'm Australian. We recently elected a Labour Govt that derives its power from Labour Unions. Virtually every member of the Government is a member of a Labour Union. But we're definitely not what you'd describe as Communist. That said, nearly all our Parties are Left of America's two Parties. We're not giving up Universal Health Care and a $22 an hour Minimum Wage. Both of those things would be non starters in the US.

    • @darthutah6649
      @darthutah6649 Год назад

      I thought Chileans voted against the constitutional change.

  • @bronzedisease
    @bronzedisease Год назад +25

    Iran has some very bright graduates. It is one of few countries in middle east and central asia where you can rely on local workers. Getting something done in some countries you have to send a legion of engineers.

  • @maliheghafari4322
    @maliheghafari4322 Год назад +19

    I’m Iranian and I watched this whole video with tears in my eyes…

    • @MAN-li7so
      @MAN-li7so Год назад +1

      Use some tessu😢😢😢😢

    • @MAN-li7so
      @MAN-li7so Год назад

      American sanctions make Iran economy week

    • @adithiarjun6764
      @adithiarjun6764 Год назад +3

      ​@@MAN-li7so tessu💀💀
      You mean tissue?

    • @666-bpm
      @666-bpm Год назад

      I feel u bro

  • @Aziz__0
    @Aziz__0 Год назад +568

    Even if bond yields are increasing while stock prices are decreasing, the markets are still skeptical whether the Federal Reserve will stick to its goal to raise interest rates until inflation is under control. While I'm still debating whether to sell my $401k worth of equities, what is the best way to profit from the present down market?

    • @user-3456rtu
      @user-3456rtu Год назад +1

      Focus on two key goals. First, stay protected by learning when to sell stocks to cut losses and capture profits. Second, prepare to profit when the market turns. I recommend that you seek advice from a CFP.

    • @carter3294
      @carter3294 Год назад +1

      @Margaret Would you mind recommending a specialist with a variety of investment options? This is extremely rare, and I eagerly await your response.

    • @carter3294
      @carter3294 Год назад

      @Margaret

    • @jimmyhenderson9761
      @jimmyhenderson9761 Год назад

      Cash baby.

    • @Firepowered
      @Firepowered Год назад

      ​@Margaret Nicole Desire Simon makes all her financial decisions by throwing stuff at a dart board, when I realized I could do the same thing for free I took back all my positions and sued her for negligence. Now she escaped to Argentina and I can't get me money back!

  • @Keen-eye
    @Keen-eye Год назад +232

    This rings true with Iran's ancient history as well, which I always found interesting. To think Iran was once upon a time an empire bringing values like, for example, freedom of religion to other countries. One of the true ancient enlightened civilizations

    • @rashnuofthegoldenscales4512
      @rashnuofthegoldenscales4512 Год назад

      We saw how you honoured that history in scandalous and racist productions like "300" 🤡 We will be just fine. Get out of our region.

    • @someboi4535
      @someboi4535 Год назад +19

      now it brings something better than the freedom of religion, it brings the one true religion. Now that is way better

    • @sidy6526
      @sidy6526 Год назад +67

      @@someboi4535
      Lol

    • @vksingh943
      @vksingh943 Год назад

      ​@@someboi4535 That one true religion is a curse to the world and to Iran itself see how bad it is doing with that one true religion

    • @alphabetpeople2902
      @alphabetpeople2902 Год назад +5

      "freedom" of religion is an oxymoron especially in Iran's case as Iran founded Abrahamic religions plus so-called "Indian" religions and then forced them upon humanity.

  • @hajijojo8058
    @hajijojo8058 Год назад +4

    I am Iranian and I hate my government because I do not have normal life

  • @saphiradaughterofthewind8902
    @saphiradaughterofthewind8902 Год назад +90

    I'm Iranian and I love your channel. Thanks for this video!

    • @master2002h
      @master2002h Год назад +1

      get rid of the shia so you can fix your country

    • @hah5663
      @hah5663 Год назад +1

      I am Iraqi

  • @iamsoccer100
    @iamsoccer100 Год назад +48

    economic explained videos are not emotional but this ones brought tears to my eyes even though I'm not even Iranian 😭

  • @Rotzfresh89
    @Rotzfresh89 Год назад +11

    It took me 3 attempts to watch this video until the end. It hurts so much especially when you go there and see how kind and welcoming the people are.

  • @bulletspike8101
    @bulletspike8101 8 месяцев назад +6

    Great video, But what you said sums up our mentality in the west “Iran could be a great economic power” what you mean is, if it does as we in the west say it can grow.
    We let China grow and now we are sanctioning it not for war, but because it became too big and a challenge to us.
    I am amazed by Irans development under sanctions. I wish our governments didn’t sanction other countries and allowed multiple types of government but we only want democracy’s that we can control.

  • @bobclark1153
    @bobclark1153 Год назад +347

    This is one of the few instances where a country's stability doesn't translate to confidence. On the stability side, with the exception of the recent protests, Iran has had the same government since the revolution and has avoided a direct war since the 80s. The Confidence side is a different story however, due to all the factors mentioned in this video. Maybe stability and confidence should be ranked separately?

    • @Houthiandtheblowfish
      @Houthiandtheblowfish Год назад +1

      All the resource rich countries from likes of iran, iraq, venezuela, aghanistan, russia and many more were plagued with one disease...
      USA 😁

    • @El_Diablo_12
      @El_Diablo_12 Год назад +17

      Economically it may be business operating environment stability that matters, and Iranian bonyads and central government control is quicksand to businesses

    • @timogul
      @timogul Год назад +16

      If you have, hypothetically, a single dictator for 50+ years, but he is crazy, and changes policies on a whim that can completely upend decision making, then that might be "stable" in the form of who is in charge, but is not "stable" in terms of the rules you have to strategize around. True "stability" would require that the rules are fair and consistent, that if I go in today under a certain set of rules, that those rules are likely to be the same twenty years later, or at least any changes made would be fair and predictable (like a new regulation after a disaster made it clear such regulation was needed, rather than "because The Boss says so.")

    • @schroederscurrentevents3844
      @schroederscurrentevents3844 Год назад +1

      It meant economic stability/confidence, primarily for foreign investment.

    • @infidelheretic923
      @infidelheretic923 Год назад

      They may have a secure grip over the country. But no one likes them.
      That’s why stability will always be low. Even with all the paramilitary and police in place sometimes even the most repressed population will have had enough and just refuse to work.
      Something similar happened in China over the Covid lockdowns. The regime didn’t change but it did reverse its policy decision.
      It would be nice if it didn’t take blood in the streets to accomplish this, but that’s how things are in totalitarian states.

  • @Croz89
    @Croz89 Год назад +303

    The odd thing is Iran does shine a bit with its transport infrastructure. Tehran has a subway system to rival many East Asian or European cities, and is also building out more subway and light rail systems outside the capital. It's also constructing high speed rail and building new airports and road infrastructure. It gets around sanctions by using a lot of Chinese technology and labour.

    • @JitzyJT
      @JitzyJT Год назад

      be in bed with USA or China.....No third option for Iran right now

    • @beback_
      @beback_ Год назад +36

      Can confirm Tehran metro is pretty great. The only project imo that this regime has done a decent job of.

    • @Croz89
      @Croz89 Год назад +16

      @@beback_ I also love the logo, it looks like some alien sigil out of an 80’s sci-fi film!

    • @rezai7703
      @rezai7703 Год назад +2

      What kind of transport infrastructure?
      How many kilometer of High Speed Train?

    • @JitzyJT
      @JitzyJT Год назад +25

      @@rezai7703 How many countries have HSR? Not even the United States......But Laos has one.....

  • @houdmeraby3664
    @houdmeraby3664 Год назад +40

    Correction: it was America who broke the nuclear deal with Iran you said it was Iran

  • @rzrbli
    @rzrbli Год назад +17

    Not all regime-controlled entitites that have a large influence on economy are called Bonyad. Revolutionary Guard Corps (Sepah) is the largest and perhaps the most influential among them. Sepah is a military organization that was created to protect the Islamic Republic and its ideals. While its primary focus is on defense and security, it has expanded its influence beyond the military sphere and has a significant presence in Iran's economy. It operates numerous businesses and controls various economic sectors, making it one of the most powerful entities in Iran.

  • @thatocelot879
    @thatocelot879 Год назад +24

    "But They Don't Care" has to be the biggest understatement in the history of RUclips titles.

  • @shzarmai
    @shzarmai Год назад +33

    A real shame indeed, hopefully one day Iran would have a better, politically free political model and a high-income advanced economy with good foreign relations with every other country in the world.

    • @habkamanja5027
      @habkamanja5027 Год назад

      As long as the United States is as powerful as it is, that's not going to happen

    • @habkamanja5027
      @habkamanja5027 Год назад +2

      Because he will make sure that it will always hold back growth, either indirectly or directly well, pretending like nothing is happening, and they are the good people and the free people

    • @ZERO-vf1nn
      @ZERO-vf1nn Год назад

      And I am glad that what you wish for will never happen. It is impossible for the Iranian regime to establish good relations with terrorist countries in the world such as America, Israel and Britain just because a mindless person like you wants to. It seems that you have reached a degree of degradation. You love to live at the mercy of others, to be humiliated and humiliated, just so that you can find a living, and this is what honorable people will not do.

  • @aroto
    @aroto Год назад +11

    I remember seeing images of Iran from 70s and 80s a while back and I couldn't believe it.

    • @ohwow2074
      @ohwow2074 Год назад

      We the gen Z of Iran cannon believe it neither. People with the help of global super powers overthrow the Pahlavi dynasty and brought in the terrorist Shia Mollas to end the 3500 year civilization.

  • @bilalyaqoob3366
    @bilalyaqoob3366 11 месяцев назад +6

    In my opinion the Iranian revolution happened to be the worst for Iran & the region as a whole.

  • @tagaway6173
    @tagaway6173 Год назад +14

    Just out of curiosity when i was younger (22, so an adult) i rented for 3 weeks a mp3 Farsi learning audio book. I was amaze at the progress i was making 😳 if Iran was able to reach at least half of its potential, people will be learning their language too. Even just to travel.

    • @mostafakhademi4654
      @mostafakhademi4654 Год назад

      come to Iran it's safe & sound like you've never seen before

    • @davidjma7226
      @davidjma7226 Год назад

      ​@@mostafakhademi4654Yeah, right. Killing teen-agers on the street for bad hijab and gassing schoolgirls sounds like a lovely safe country. Don't lie. And don't think I am some westerner spreading lies. I am married to an Iranian and have friends and family there. I am kept very well informed about the truth of what goes on in Iran.

  • @infidelheretic923
    @infidelheretic923 Год назад +5

    “He would see the kingdom burnt to the ground if he could be king of the ashes.”
    This quote from A song of Ice and Fire applies equally well to the Ayatollah.

  • @souravjaiswal-jr4bj
    @souravjaiswal-jr4bj Год назад +110

    Iran is close enough to India to make sea bound CNG much cheaper than LNG. Given the small footprint and construction time, India could take 1/3rd of Iran's entire production (future) once the sanctions are lifted.

    • @normanclatcher
      @normanclatcher Год назад +12

      Heck, the benefits might even be worth the risk already. I would not mind looking the other way if it means India get the major buff.

    • @Houthiandtheblowfish
      @Houthiandtheblowfish Год назад

      All the resource rich countries from likes of iran, iraq, venezuela, aghanistan, russia and many more were plagued with one disease...
      USA 😁

    • @JitzyJT
      @JitzyJT Год назад

      @@normanclatcher just like how the west is starting to look the other way on India buying cheap (not so cheap if you ask me) Russian oil and exporting the refined petroleum product back to the hypocrites

    • @varunmittal3617
      @varunmittal3617 Год назад +21

      No dearth of oil and gas resources. we are living in an artificial curtailed supply market otherwise oil is not even worth $10 per barrel if all supply hit market

    • @Moemuntz
      @Moemuntz Год назад +10

      It’s the common sense thing to do. But this government doesn’t want what’s in the interest of Iran, they prefer to use Strait of Hormuz as a political weapon to threaten their neighbors and the west so building a pipeline to India would make this threat meaningless. It would benefit the regime economically but it would remove one weapon from their arsenal.

  • @hyhhy
    @hyhhy 10 месяцев назад +4

    It's mostly not about "caring", although Iran surely isn't perfect, but rather mostly about US-led economic and technological sanctions. However, recently Russia has left the technological sanctions regime to a large extent, and Iran is also said to be in talks about joining the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.

  • @joenichols3901
    @joenichols3901 Год назад +88

    I'm an American, I have a huge interest/respect for Iran (I always think Persian) culture. I'd love to go visit and to see Iran prosper. Sad to see human/nation potential being squandered

    • @iranjan1382
      @iranjan1382 Год назад

      Sanction is a weapon of mass destruction!
      Sanctions, war and coup are three things that America pursues in its foreign policy. It has nothing to do with the opposite country. With a lie, they can attack Iraq, sanction Iran with a lie, and stage a coup in Venezuela with a lie!
      The US just wants to impose its orders on other countries! By war, by coup or by sanctions! The truth is, he doesn't care how many millions of people fall victim to his wishes.

    • @OshinAttari
      @OshinAttari Год назад +1

      Welcome

    • @pouyabahrami7669
      @pouyabahrami7669 Год назад +1

      But IMF ranks Iran as 22nd in the world, NOW! just GOOGLE it. Iranians love Americans too.

    • @SamPashmi
      @SamPashmi Год назад +4

      @@OshinAttari that’s not our flag

    • @SamPashmi
      @SamPashmi Год назад

      Iran is run by a dictator, that’s hates America, hence for your own safety, I’d avoid it if I were you

  • @finfet9828
    @finfet9828 Год назад +10

    Iran has one of best brain power. I am an electronics student and I find many papers related to my field from iranian origin scientist. My Phd. guide is also going to be an iranian origin madam😅

  • @henryrowland9008
    @henryrowland9008 Год назад +60

    Man I'm lucky af my mothers irish my dads american and I was born in switzerland I am the top 3 of the Economics Explained Leaderboard yet i'm still broke.

    • @camocas
      @camocas Год назад +10

      😂

    • @Sum_Ting_Wong
      @Sum_Ting_Wong Год назад +21

      Living in Switzerland does that for you....

    • @henryrowland9008
      @henryrowland9008 Год назад +2

      @@Sum_Ting_Wong I'm so broke I don't even live there anymore

    • @henryrowland9008
      @henryrowland9008 Год назад +1

      @@Sum_Ting_Wong if I was still living there I'd be getting at least 3600 a month living with my dad

    • @fasilkhan1854
      @fasilkhan1854 Год назад +2

      😂😂😂 that made me laugh!

  • @rezaulkarimchowdhury4936
    @rezaulkarimchowdhury4936 Год назад +26

    Iran is not a country, it’s a jail.

  • @neeneko
    @neeneko Год назад +26

    Iran and DPRK have become frightening counterexamples to the assumed correctness of modern economic philosophy. People just sorta take it a a given that being a wealthy _country_ is desirable and necessary, and that is how you rank them. But today we can clearly see that even with sanctions and a poor economy, the rulers of a country can still a life of wealth and privilege... so from their perspective, a big economy doesn't actually gain them much and isn't all that important.

    • @Redmenace96
      @Redmenace96 Год назад +1

      I understand your comment, great job. The dude says, "They don't care" so many times, it really sunk in. I agree.

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Год назад

      @@Redmenace96 The elites only care about maintaining their wealth and power, at the expense of everyone else.

  • @seniorss2401
    @seniorss2401 Год назад +30

    Oh we do care dear one, but we can't fix this messed up mishmash of government and society that we have

    • @rafanadir6958
      @rafanadir6958 Год назад +1

      Why?

    • @seniorss2401
      @seniorss2401 Год назад +8

      @@rafanadir6958 because as I said it is messed up.
      People living in other countries can't realistically imagine what's going on here, what he presented to you in this short video documentary was a simplified imperfect introductionary to why Iran has become the crippled state that it is today
      I don't blame him because there is shortage of insightfull information about my country abroad and this a economy channel and economy here is to intertwined with politics and history

    • @seniorss2401
      @seniorss2401 Год назад

      @@rafanadir6958 *too intertwined

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Год назад

      @@seniorss2401 and I can’t help but feel that that’s on purpose. The Iranian government has no doubt been hiding crucial information for years.

    • @syncopatedfeb4770
      @syncopatedfeb4770 Год назад

      @@seniorss2401 israeli bot lol

  • @ravuste
    @ravuste Год назад +13

    Im looking forward for an episode on Ecuador. It uses the US dollar as it currency and relies mostly on oil exports but it has a wide percentage of it population on the verge of poverty. Its just a very interesting case.

  • @shidohihiho
    @shidohihiho 5 месяцев назад +3

    Iran could have been the next South Korea or Japan or even Germany. Their talents are pretty much limitless and not for one particular system either. It can go for the best of both worlds even. Such a missed opportunity.

  • @JanBruunAndersen
    @JanBruunAndersen Год назад +4

    #0:49 - Land, Labour, Capital
    It also needs:
    - Stability
    - Laws that protect private property
    - Free market

  • @kiyanhakim384
    @kiyanhakim384 Год назад +21

    I really find it interesting. Many sources say iran is in the 20 largest economies in the world, others say it is one of the smallest. Iran itself doesn't issue a statement and seems to prefer it to remain unknown. I can only think of the fact that rampant corruption and lack of correct regulations have gone as far as to make it completeley impossible to calculate accurately, and the government definetely seems to be profitting the most of this, as the lack of transparency is helping them to make billions personally, as well as not letting their ennemies know what is going on exactly, and therefore keep telling their population how sanctions are the reason they are currently broke. However I must admit that from the places I've been to, Iran is more developed and more industrial, with higher living standards than what you would expect from a country like it. There is definitely a bunch of capital floating around, sanctions seem to have their effects as well but corruption seems to have a greater effect.

    • @eljangoolak
      @eljangoolak Год назад +6

      Issue is it should be a 1-5 trillion economy that is now a 300 billion economy because of bad government. Iran should be the south korea or germany of the middle east(at least) but they hv turned it into north korea of middle east!

    • @sidy6526
      @sidy6526 Год назад +4

      @@eljangoolak it could have been close to 2-2.5 trillion with the vast resources and more importantly it's educated people.
      Saudi also has oil but it's people are not that good in scientific education as that of Iranians .

    • @jaimelannister141
      @jaimelannister141 Год назад +1

      Iran is the world's 18th largest economy by GDP. However, when you calculate it per capita, it's a different story.

    • @sidy6526
      @sidy6526 Год назад +2

      @@jaimelannister141
      No , it is not 18th.
      Nominal GDP of iran is 370 billion $ , it is far away from top 20 economies.
      On 18th we have Saudi Arabia who economy is close to 1 trillion $

    • @jaimelannister141
      @jaimelannister141 Год назад +1

      @@sidy6526 The nominal GDP of Iran cannot be correctly calculated due to the fluctuations of the US dollar in their free market. And honestly, the concept of nominal GDP is quite meaningless when you don't intend to exchange goods using US dollar. The PPP GDP of Iran which is what matters is about 1.8 trillion dollars.

  • @natjohnstone1689
    @natjohnstone1689 Год назад +14

    It would be interesting to see some Latin American countries covered on your channel mate. There is even the potential for a video covering the cyclical issues faced by the vast majority of Latin American countries and their economies.

  • @subhashvyas3877
    @subhashvyas3877 Год назад +36

    Very surprising and sad that as a country with such natural resources, climate, beauty, culture history educated people in all Middle Asia , is what it is today,it has a potential to be back to its original place..always liked Iranians friendly and jovial, best wishes

  • @gihan.u2001
    @gihan.u2001 Год назад +8

    Sri Lanka had just a one hard year It does not mean that they are a failed state, their economy in now recovering phase

  • @4.1132
    @4.1132 Год назад +22

    It does appear that politics place some of the greatest limitations on certain nations. What makes this even worse is how inter- and intraconnected economies are to the point that it creates so many variables that either harm or enhance potential. If and how Iran lives up to its potential will be interesting to see and hopefully be resolved with the least damage to people and their livelihood.

  • @Ali-bu6lo
    @Ali-bu6lo Год назад +15

    6:45 I don't know where did get this from, but no, the "Bonyads" and other institutions of the regime such as the revolutionary guard are not "quiet popular", they despised by our people.

  • @ItsRogerSmith
    @ItsRogerSmith Год назад +4

    The top priority of every Totalitarian Regime is to save itself from falling apart which costs almost every kind of national resources.

  • @Brahmdagh
    @Brahmdagh Год назад +4

    This. Most people have got no idea how big of a power house Iran is

  • @apathak34
    @apathak34 Год назад +42

    The sad thing is Iran seems to have missed the bus. If situation doesn't change in the next 15-20 years then Iran would lose all it's demographic dividend and once it's gone, it's gone forever. Iran will start turning into an ageing society in the coming decades so the time for rapid growth is right now. Even if Iran becomes democratic in the 2040s it would be too late and majority of their human potential would have been wasted by then.

    • @JitzyJT
      @JitzyJT Год назад +1

      so start having kids

    • @freddy4603
      @freddy4603 Год назад +12

      @@JitzyJT easier said than done

    • @pouyabahrami7669
      @pouyabahrami7669 Год назад +13

      @@freddy4603 It's easy to have kids. Taking care of them is whole other thing. 🤣

    • @rashnuofthegoldenscales4512
      @rashnuofthegoldenscales4512 Год назад

      The West is in a de facto recession. Iran isn't.

    • @sidy6526
      @sidy6526 Год назад

      Iran is a islamic society and their birth rate might increase also .
      Birth decrease with time is a phenomenon more closely related to other religions and secular countries, not islamic .
      Like in Egypt tfr increase from 3 to 3.5 between 2008-2014 , that was a surprise increase. People in islamic countries have more tfr , so they can increase their population with some efforts

  • @pooyafitness
    @pooyafitness Год назад +37

    I left this country forever. I don't have any hopes of the situation getting any better in my lifetime.

    • @eoinoconnell185
      @eoinoconnell185 Год назад +14

      It will.
      It's a country I want to visit and am convinced a change will happen shortly.

    • @alienx4560
      @alienx4560 Год назад +11

      @@eoinoconnell185 cap😂😂

    • @Tpmc9fq
      @Tpmc9fq Год назад +2

      ​@@eoinoconnell185
      It will but we cannot know when..

    • @pooyafitness
      @pooyafitness Год назад +4

      @@eoinoconnell185 God willing.

    • @eoinoconnell185
      @eoinoconnell185 Год назад +3

      @@pooyafitness The government no longer reflects the populace.
      Change is inevitable.

  • @Mamabozorg
    @Mamabozorg 3 месяца назад +4

    we dont have any problem like most countries have. we only have WESTERN PROPAGANDA problem that makes eyes look different and be unthankful

  • @khalidalali186
    @khalidalali186 Год назад +5

    We are five days away, from the 115th anniversary of the 1908 discovery of oil in Persia. Which is 30-50 years prior to any similar discovery, to take place in the various states of Arabia.
    It’s quite sad, that even by now, at the tail-end of the oil age. Iranians are yet to reap the rewards of this tens-of-millions old resource. I wonder if any of them fathom that reality. That they are living through the twilight, of what was, a once in every 30-50 million years opportunity.

  • @carljohnson9331
    @carljohnson9331 Год назад +19

    I used to be bitter, support certain countries and wish bad things for certain others. But nowadays I am starting to understand that people all across the world are caught in the same dilemma, that is if leaders ruled efficiently EVERYONE could have a generally better standard of living - it's possible.
    Sadly it is not the case.
    Because we continue to fight pointless wars, we continue to argue over oil price and natural resources, we continue to trust what the news says instead of our own judgement.
    At least channels like this are spreading awareness and education, which is the way out of this.
    I shed a tear in hopes of a better future for all of humanity.

    • @nouhkazemi4167
      @nouhkazemi4167 Год назад +2

      What type of awareness is being spreaded here? This video is neglecting all political reasons for economic malfunction. Iran is sanctioned by USA because for rightful reasons Iran does not agree american policies and the solution this video suggests is "just surrender!" for the sake of GDP :))) So this is our answer "NEVER"

    • @lupusdei0819
      @lupusdei0819 11 месяцев назад

      @@nouhkazemi4167lol

  • @KiyosakiSays
    @KiyosakiSays Год назад +30

    “If you want to be rich, don’t allow yourself the luxury of excuses.” - Robert Kiyosaki

  • @AliAliAliAli062
    @AliAliAliAli062 Год назад +2

    As one of the millions of unemployed Iranian youth, this video was very sad for me. I hope this religious regime will be overthrown so that we can see better days in Iran and Iran's economy.

    • @العقيدمعمرالقذافي-ح4ف
      @العقيدمعمرالقذافي-ح4ف Год назад

      how do you sustain yourself if you're unemployed ? how are you able to pay for english lessons and internet ?

    • @AliAliAliAli062
      @AliAliAliAli062 Год назад +2

      @@العقيدمعمرالقذافي-ح4ف Sometimes at the age of 25, I get financial help from my parents, should I explain my pain and misery more?

    • @night_wolf9734
      @night_wolf9734 Год назад

      ​@@AliAliAliAli062 overthrowing the government is not the solution for the current economic problems. US sanctions needs to be lifted which is unlikely bcz of US just don't want a strong Iran.

    • @AliAliAliAli062
      @AliAliAliAli062 Год назад +2

      @@night_wolf9734 Do you Live In Iran?
      So you know nothing about Islamic regime, our problem isn't just economic.
      On the other hand, the US sanctions against the regime are in most cases completely correct for weaken this regime so that the people can change the regime and have a free economy in the next government, but the repressions and killings of the current regime have postponed this overthrow for the time being.

  • @sepehrariaei8123
    @sepehrariaei8123 Год назад +4

    It’s all about corruption and supporting te-rr,orism and maybe 30% sanctions

  • @sammysuri393
    @sammysuri393 Год назад +5

    Natural resources ARE the reason we bacame miserable in the first place. The combination of oil and religious state have never occured with democracy at the same time.
    A government whose main income is oil instead of tax, is a government that doesn't rely on its people and doesn't have to answer to them.
    At the same time tax income makes a regime want financial gains for it's people at all costs, cuz they would gain a portion of that income. Where as in Iran the regime sells oil and therefore they rely on their customers and resources instead of people.
    On the other hand religion plays the role of legitimacy instead of people, since they are the holy representatives of god and his prophet. What role people are playing then? Naught.

    • @sammysuri393
      @sammysuri393 Год назад

      Give it some thought...

    • @sammysuri393
      @sammysuri393 Год назад

      @@Go-gn1cz religion & natural resources (especially oil), are the recipe of a successful dictatorship. It doesn't mean every dictator has them both. Though it means you can't have both and be democratic, it just hasn't happened yet.

  • @nisargjoshi4816
    @nisargjoshi4816 Год назад +6

    A nation having a vertical power structure similar to the USSR doesn’t undergo changes from the bottom layer of the society. It’s always the council or the party supremo who can enact changes. That’s the harsh reality. So unless the religious council or Khomeini himself decides to restructure the economy, we won’t be able to witness any economic miracle in Iran.

  • @abdulgonyripon4698
    @abdulgonyripon4698 11 месяцев назад +2

    Iran's Economy Could Be Huge... They just don't bend their knees and take it from behind

  • @sykaax
    @sykaax Год назад +34

    In ancient times, 2500 years ago, on the territory of modern Iran, there were many empires in different periods. For Europeans, for example, I will say Parthia and the Parthian Empire. It was at that time the second - the third richest state in the world. After the Roman Empire and China. And Iran's location, its climate, its culture, its education may indeed allow the country to have a GDP of several trillion dollars or more, and Iran may once again be one of the most influential countries in the world in terms of economy. All that is needed is to throw out the stupid religious crazy government and make a normal secular government again that will be focused on the development of the country and not on wars.

    • @GDL88
      @GDL88 Год назад

      We need to know what Germany did post WW1 to become a world power.

    • @syedabbas5822
      @syedabbas5822 Год назад

      America with its military industrial complex laughing in the corner 😤😤😤

    • @husseinbonaud1883
      @husseinbonaud1883 Год назад +7

      Unfortunately.... The shortcomings of Iran's current regime has nothing to do with it being "backward" or "religious".
      The problem is with the "iranian" political, social and business mentality that existed before the islamic revolution and will endure after it. Nepotism, corruption, an easy-going attitude toward life, tribal mindset, etc.
      Those are the things that must be addressed, and assuming everything will be fine and dandy as soon as the mullah are ousted is overly optimistic.
      Iranians didn't have a success/company/self sacrifice mindset (like Japan or Germany) under the previous regime and won't magically have one under the next.

    • @lambert801
      @lambert801 Год назад +6

      ​​​​​​​@@husseinbonaud1883
      You definitely don't need a "self-sacrifice" mentality to progress. Such a mentality probably was necessary for countries like Japan and Germany to progress- countries that don't really have any natural resources; but for an incredibly resource-rich country such as Iran, it's not necessary at all. Take Qataris, for example: they barely work at all and yet are well-off and doing pretty good. Why? Natural resources.
      Look at the French. There's no way they'd sacrifice their personal life for anything else, and yet they're among the most powerful and influential nations in the world, both economically and militarily.
      As for nepotism and corruption, I totally agree with you. That's a problem that runs deep in Iranian society and has, in fact, been holding Iran back for thousands of years. Did it stop Iran from being among the top three most rich and powerful countries on earth for almost all of its ancient history? No. Will it make it impossible for Iran to become a rich and powerful nation again? Not really. Iran was rampart with corruption and nepotism in the Pahlavi era, and yet it was also among the top 5 economies in the world, and its military was probably the best in the whole of Asia.

    • @tictac5274
      @tictac5274 Год назад

      ​@@husseinbonaud1883nah it's definitely a religious issue as the government is hard-line religious maniacs.
      I'm not sure what you mean by "tribal mindset" as most Iranians are very educated as seen on this video and follow western practices more than most of the neighbouring countries lol.

  • @norwegianzound
    @norwegianzound Год назад +8

    I had to laugh when I saw Ireland at number 2 on the GDP rankings. More like number 30 in reality. Hugely skewed by the parking of billions of intellectual property (which generates massive licensing fees) in ireland. Every western European country citizen has more spendable income than Irish residents.

    • @JitzyJT
      @JitzyJT Год назад

      time to join with England and Scotland and suffer as one nation

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 Год назад

      ​@@JitzyJT 😅

  • @missme2046
    @missme2046 Год назад +30

    Thank you for taking a look at iran it’s nice to see that some western people still think about us and how we are becoming poorer and poorer and thrown back to the 1920s era lol

    • @Sum_Ting_Wong
      @Sum_Ting_Wong Год назад +8

      If you're in the 1920s then Afghanistan and Pakistan are in the 1520s....

    • @Kuricang31
      @Kuricang31 Год назад +3

      You were in 1920s but still be able to produced cars and missiles?? You're must be joking 😂

    • @master2002h
      @master2002h Год назад

      get rid of the shia so you can fix your country

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Год назад +8

      @@Kuricang31 the wealth inequality in Iran is pretty insane.
      I remembered reading that Tehran has one of the highest concentrations of Porsche owners in the world.

    • @syncopatedfeb4770
      @syncopatedfeb4770 Год назад +3

      @@Kuricang31 it's an israeli bot lol

  • @furqanirfan2676
    @furqanirfan2676 Год назад +3

    World: Why Iran economy is a failure?
    USA: Don't look at me

  • @randomamerican8236
    @randomamerican8236 Год назад +8

    The beginning of the video stated that 10% of the Iranian workforce works for the government in money losing operations. The author of the video said "these workers who are dependent on the government won't speak out against the government they are dependent on."
    Things not mentioned: 15% of Americans are employed by the government in money losing operations.
    Love the self reporting, Among Us all over again.

    • @imapimplykindapimp
      @imapimplykindapimp Год назад +2

      Key difference is that the us government can change hands via elections instead of just revolution - in Iran there is no way to change government rule without changing the government structure

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 Год назад +1

      ​@@imapimplykindapimp And Iran directly vets who gets to run in elections, ensuring that only IRI loyalists can become politicians.

  • @kimi9876
    @kimi9876 Год назад +6

    This country is economically huge, they do developed domestic economy instead of crashing all economy to become gas stop without national sovereignty. Respect to this. No benefit to going the root of western consumerism which does not produce much of a benefit to the society.

  • @mohammedkhaliq1475
    @mohammedkhaliq1475 Год назад +9

    I think some of the causes of their pro isn’t entirely their fault, the issue is much more complicated. For example if Iran starts selling oil on the global market it will cause the other producers to lose money, Saudi Arabia puts its oil profits back into the US economy by buying hundreds of billions in weapons and investing in the stock market and real estate, among other investments in businesses. If Money Saudi Arabia ends up losing to Iran is less money invested back into US economy, and it’s a similar situation with the other major producers. So to prevent them from competent they make reasons to punish them with sanctions. Saudi Arabia has been accused of worse and has been caught red handed yet no sanctions against them. There are other “conflicts of interest” that have contributed to Irans current situation which cannot be explained in a short video essay.

    • @VafaFerdowsians
      @VafaFerdowsians 7 месяцев назад

      Agreed. History is very telling. USA and England deposed the shah bc he created monopoly of oil. Instability in the Middle East is what USA is very good at. Look at history if u don’t agree. Weird that USA brought in the Ayatollah and now is fighting the results (Houthis and Hamas and taliban backed by Iran) and the average person doesn’t see that or understand

  • @Si_fly
    @Si_fly Год назад +5

    Iran also had the chance of good politcs. But CIA

  • @ethicalmemeing7060
    @ethicalmemeing7060 Год назад +6

    Lift all sanctions and ask US to leave the region, then you'll see Iran as wealthy and prosperous as UAE if not better. Interestingly, hardly more prosperous, West backed Sharia lands like Saudi dont get the same level of scrutiny and mourning despite having stricter versions of Islamic law and almost no democratic dimension.

    • @souvikrc4499
      @souvikrc4499 10 месяцев назад

      It would likely be just like Russia: a lot of wealth concentrated on top in a corrupt oligarchy

  • @___librum___
    @___librum___ Год назад +35

    When US ousts a democratic leader, it is natural for a more religious one to take the reigns. This situation was further exacerbated when the US imposed sanctions on it, partly to inprove its relations with rivals.

    • @anwarsadat6670
      @anwarsadat6670 Год назад

      This is the summary of the problems. The US is more responsible than the Iranian regime.

    • @advancetotabletop5328
      @advancetotabletop5328 Год назад

      Well, Nixon and Kissinger (?) tried to get China into the UN fold, and look what happened.

  • @persianguy1524
    @persianguy1524 Год назад +7

    Irans economy is 1.8 trillion, not 300 billion. You already got that wrong and our gdp is 18-23 thousand according to imf

    • @kavipandit
      @kavipandit Год назад +1

      Ppp not gdp

    • @persianguy1524
      @persianguy1524 Год назад +2

      @@kavipandit no literally gdp. Search up imf’s report on Irans economy

    • @GEIR_Secular
      @GEIR_Secular Год назад +1

      its around 400 billion $ not 1.7 trillion $ ,i checked and its ppp

  • @AzitaS.-tt7le
    @AzitaS.-tt7le 8 месяцев назад +1

    As an Iranian, I can tell you that on balance, it’s better for us to keep Iran unified as one nation while we try to institute change from the inside vs. let greedy globalists divide iup Iran like they intend (balkanization of perceived threatening nations). The Iranian population itself is unlikely ever to be able to fully benefit from the country’s riches due to foreign business and development plans (that usually just line the pockets of corporate heads) and also internal cultural limitations such as a proclivity for corruption and self-serving. We get the government we deserve - like every other country!

    • @redman1249
      @redman1249 7 месяцев назад

      Iran is a sh*hole.

  • @samsphaneron
    @samsphaneron Год назад +40

    Not sure if I'm not mixing stuff up, but I believe Iran was the center of Islam's thought for quite some time in the past, including maths and architecture among others, sometimes ahead of the times in global terms. It is really exhaustingly sad to see how much damage a few wrong people at the wrong time in the wrong place can cause, even for their own descendants (not meaning those in power, as they fare well most likely, but those descending from regime change supporters for example - such short-sightedness...). Coming from Poland, I think here we know something about significant potential (relatively high levels of general population's education, innate entrepreneurship, hard-working ethics etc. running within society) can go to waste for decades due to history's peculiar sense of humor... Hope to see some of that potential realised in the future, all the best to all Iranians from Warsaw!

    • @PakistanIcecream000
      @PakistanIcecream000 Год назад +10

      I also had the impression that many polymaths from the Islamic golden age were of Persian descent. They're an intelligent people.

    • @only_fair23
      @only_fair23 Год назад +4

      ​​@harrysnothead8939They are still Persia. Persia is what the Greeks called the Pars kingdom who conquered the rest of Iran under Cyrus and Persia became the word that the West used for Iran itself.
      Iran was called Persia by the West until the 1930s

    • @REgamesplayer
      @REgamesplayer 11 месяцев назад

      Well, it is oppress or be oppressed.

  • @varhYT
    @varhYT Год назад +4

    >This Country's Economy Could Be Huge, But They Don't Care
    Major gigachad energy

  • @nananananananananana1926
    @nananananananananana1926 Год назад +9

    "This is Iran"
    *holds breath*
    *actually shows Iran*
    😅👍🏼

  • @behrozmostofian1718
    @behrozmostofian1718 Год назад +1

    An economy based on selling oil and gas is not worth having. The economy must be based on industry and farming.

  • @LM1481-eb3td
    @LM1481-eb3td Год назад +7

    Another great vid! Can you do the Philippines next? The last one featuring it didn’t include the leaderboard yet

    • @cashewnuttel9054
      @cashewnuttel9054 Год назад

      Marcos Jr. will make the philippines a supah dupah rich country, richer than Singapore even.

  • @ahsanhabib9820
    @ahsanhabib9820 Год назад +5

    Having a lot of natural resources does,nt guarantee economic growth and prosperity in the end it comes down to the leadership and its vision for the country

  • @raheelhaider9295
    @raheelhaider9295 Год назад +4

    Iran is doing better than many many countries in the world trust me we are in worst conditions than Iran .......Iranian economy is still bigger than KSA and many other countries as per World Bank

  • @mohsenz2050
    @mohsenz2050 Год назад +3

    Thanks for your great, informative video! And for not only using desert footage of Iran to present it :)

  • @ashkanbahrami2853
    @ashkanbahrami2853 Год назад +4

    There is a common mistake about Iran’s GDP. If you adjust it with the market price of USD then if goes down at the vicinity of 100 (USD billion). It is suggested to assess the economy volume by GDP PPP. It demonstrates more accurate picture of Iran’s economy!

    • @yadegarkavian
      @yadegarkavian Год назад +1

      Hey Ashkan,
      Would you mind telling me what you mean by this comment in Persian? I did not understand what you meant.

  • @victorokello9611
    @victorokello9611 Год назад +7

    I'd love to see how we, Kenya, rank on the EE National leaderboard

    • @mwanikimwaniki6801
      @mwanikimwaniki6801 Год назад +4

      There's nothing much going on here to even get us on the channel as a video lol

    • @victorokello9611
      @victorokello9611 Год назад +1

      @@mwanikimwaniki6801 Yeah maybe. I think a video on our handling of debt , China relations, our economic standing in Africa, economic policies and how those affect our development would be a good watch

  • @shahroozleon9098
    @shahroozleon9098 Год назад +5

    Makes my tears flow

  • @moepharmo
    @moepharmo 5 месяцев назад +2

    I think you need to look into issues like homelessness poverty and compare it to other countries

  • @noamrotstain3182
    @noamrotstain3182 Год назад +3

    We stand with the Persians and all people of Iran that seek freedom and democracy. Sending love from a not so far away neighbouring land 🇮🇱❤️🇮🇷

  • @lordhosseinlh
    @lordhosseinlh Год назад +6

    The King of Iran did say that in around 20 years, we would pass Japan and many developed countries with his plans but as Carter said in a video, He will not allow Iran to do so and made sure the King would leave Iran and helped khomeni get in power.

    • @VafaFerdowsians
      @VafaFerdowsians 7 месяцев назад +1

      Absolutely. Most people in the west don’t know this fact.

  • @chiefdog0086
    @chiefdog0086 Год назад +34

    Please do South Africa 🇿🇦 very interesting economics at play.

    • @virginiansupremacy
      @virginiansupremacy Год назад +3

      he did

    • @xxxBradTxxx
      @xxxBradTxxx Год назад +2

      Botswana would be better, it’s probably the most stable country on the continent.

    • @raymondyeo6507
      @raymondyeo6507 Год назад

      I believe that things will improve eventually. The strength of the ethnic group will eventually shine through current times.