Posted on 02/24/2016 6:34:25 PM PST by Lorianne
During a sombre visit to Germany last week, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi urged the international community to help boost his country's crisis economy in the face of plummeting crude oil prices, underscoring a desperate situation in which Iraq has lost 85 percent of its oil revenues.
Iraqi oil revenues have fallen to just 15 percent of what they used to be, the embattled prime minister said, despite a boost in production ordered last year.
The surge in production has failed to compensate for the collapse of oil prices, and the situation is dire when oil revenues constitute around 43 percent of Iraqâs gross domestic product (GDP), 99 percent of its exports and 90 percent of all federal revenues.
This has prompted the Al Abadi government to announce strict austerity measures across institutions, including significant salary cuts for middle-class government employees. Protest rallies were held against delayed salaries, which later turned violent in some parts of Iraq, including the Kurdistan region.
Under these circumstances, one must question the legitimacy of the deal Baghdad has now offered to the Iraqi Kurds.
Earlier this week, Baghdad extended an offer to pay the salaries of the KRGâs public employees in return for a halting of unilateral oil exports by the Kurds. Both sides need this deal. The KRG is struggling to pay salaries, and protests are mountingâthreatening the stability of what was not long ago the only peaceful and secure place in all of Iraq.
But most significantly, both Baghdad and the KRG need to ensure that the Kurdish Peshmerga fighting forces are being paid, because this is the key bulwark against further Islamic State (ISIS) advancements in the disputed territories of northern Iraq, around Mosul and oil-rich Kirkuk.
(Excerpt) Read more at oilprice.com ...
Does anyone care? I don’t!
What planet do these idiots live on? Iraq has been in a state of chaos since Obama withdrew American troops.
If the US had grabbed all of the oil production, Iraq wouldn’t have been affected by the recent drop in the Oil Prices.
I’d say “chaos” is too mild a word for the current mayhem in Irack, now overrun by ISIS. It’s probably more like “Hell”.
If the USA invades such a country again, be prepared to make it a money-making colony and stay for at least 50 years — or don’t invade at all.
“...oil revenues constitute around 43 percent of Iraq’s gross domestic product (GDP), 99 percent of its exports and 90 percent of all federal revenues. “
Make more sand...
Folks, if you're reading this, you know what needs to happen.
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Does “On the brink of chaos” mean an improvement or deterioration?
Wow, there's a thought for you! I suppose that wasn't an option that presented itself at the time.
Yup
Another Odunga, Cancklebeast, Lurch success story. It was a MUCH better place in 2008.
Less money for the apparatchiks to steal. Gosh!
Even before that....
let EVERYONE in the mid east eat sand.
To hell with em.
Overcoming chaos builds character. It’s time the rest of the world learns to deal with it on it’s own. The US is out of money and patience for trying to rehabilitate barbarians.
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