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Iran Media Breaks Silence, War Hits Jobs, Prices, Stability

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Iran Media Breaks Silence As War Hits Jobs, Prices, Stability

Iran Freedom .jpg

Media Finally Acknowledge Economic Pain

For months, Iranian outlets tiptoed around the economic fallout of the war. Now the silence is breaking. Newspapers and state-linked analysts are openly warning that the conflict is hammering everyday livelihoods, with prices surging and key sectors buckling under pressure. As a fragile ceasefire holds near the Strait of Hormuz, attention inside Tehran is shifting from battlefield narratives to a more dangerous front: the domestic economy.

Medicine Prices Soar, Shortages Bite

The pharmaceutical sector has become a flashpoint. Some medicines have reportedly jumped nearly six-fold in price, forcing a stark choice between scarcity and affordability. Officials admit the dilemma. One parliamentary figure bluntly framed it: either medicines disappear—or they remain available at punishing cost. For ordinary Iranians, that trade-off is already translating into hardship.

Warnings Over Protests—and Crackdowns

Alongside economic alarm bells, a darker message is emerging. Hardline voices are signalling how unrest could be handled. Protests over rising prices, one state TV analyst suggested, may be treated as collaboration with foreign enemies. It’s a clear warning: economic anger could quickly be recast as a national security threat, raising the stakes for any public dissent.

Economy Strained Across the Board

The damage runs far beyond prices. Infrastructure hits, disrupted supply chains and ongoing internet restrictions are choking business activity. Iran’s digital economy has slowed sharply, while traditional sectors struggle to keep goods moving. Moderate newspapers warn the war is no longer just physical—it is steadily eroding economic relationships and household stability.

Experts Warn of Growing Internal Weakness

Economists are increasingly blunt. Critics say government missteps—from delayed export controls on food to questionable spending priorities—have worsened the crisis. Frustration that fueled earlier unrest has not gone away; if anything, it’s deepening. One analyst warned the state’s response today looks weaker than during past conflicts, raising questions about its ability to manage prolonged pressure.

Workers Bear the Brunt

The heaviest toll is falling on workers. Layoffs, unpaid wages and rising poverty are spreading fast. Reports suggest thousands have already lost jobs in key regions, with estimates indicating over a million jobs impacted nationwide. For many, the war is not an abstract geopolitical struggle—it’s the sudden loss of income and security.

A System Under Pressure

Iran still has economic capacity, experts argue—but lacks the political will to deploy it effectively. Calls are growing for investment in domestic production and urgent measures to protect jobs. Without that shift, the warning is clear: economic strain could tip into wider instability.

The message from Tehran’s media is unmistakable. The war is no longer just being fought at sea or in the skies—it is now hitting the kitchen table.

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