
Iran’s Point-to-Point Inflation Hits 88.6% as War Damage Compounds Sanctions Strain
Food prices more than double year-on-year, with rural inflation exceeding 100%, while a $270 billion war bill and naval blockade push millions into poverty and force subsidy promises.
The Statistical Centre of Iran reported that point-to-point inflation reached 88.6% in the Persian month of Khordad (22 May–21 June), with the food and beverages category surging 135% compared with the same month a year earlier. In rural areas, the overall point-to-point rate crossed 108%. The data mark a sharp acceleration from 68% in February, before the outbreak of hostilities with the United States and Israel, and from 52.6% in December 2025, when protests over the cost of living erupted across the country.
The war and its aftermath have magnified a crisis already driven by chronic sanctions. Forty days of American and Israeli bombing targeted energy grids, steel mills, petrochemical plants, ports and transport corridors, followed by a two-month naval blockade that sealed off much of Iran’s remaining export capacity. The damage bill is estimated at $270 billion, a sum economists note is comparable in scale to the losses sustained during the eight-year Iran–Iraq war. The blockade and destruction of infrastructure have slashed oil-export revenues, widening a budget deficit that the government has financed by borrowing from the central bank. Liquidity surged more than 53% last year to roughly 16,000 trillion tomans, and government debt to the banking system rose 42%, feeding the inflationary spiral.
Households are absorbing the shock through collapsing purchasing power. A field study cited by the daily Donya-e Eqtesad found that a four-person family now spends about 77% of its income on food, excluding any subsidy. The poorest deciles face point-to-point rates above 100%, while the wealthiest decile registers 85%. In response, the government has pledged to increase the value of the electronic food subsidy, or kala-berg, to compensate for rising prices, and the economy minister has linked the promise to a potential easing of oil sanctions that would unlock frozen funds and allow unfettered crude sales. At the same time, the authorities have imposed an official increase in bread prices, effective from 6 Tir, ending a period of ad hoc pricing and triggering intensified market inspections.
Viewed from Washington, the economic data underscore the pressure on Tehran as negotiators convene in Switzerland under a fragile ceasefire. The government’s capacity to deliver on subsidy pledges and contain further unrest hinges on whether sanctions relief materialises and on the trajectory of food prices in the coming Persian months. The next consumer price index release will indicate whether the monthly inflation rate, which has remained above 5% for six consecutive months, begins to ease.
| Iranian & allied press | −0.20 | neutral |
|---|---|---|
| Atlantic / Anglosphere press | −0.80 | critical |
| Chinese press | −0.30 | critical |
The Iranian regime rejects accusations of economic mismanagement and blames foreign sanctions for inflation.
By attributing the crisis to external factors, the regime shifts responsibility and reinforces the narrative of resistance.
It omits internal corruption and spending on proxy forces.
The West condemns the Iranian regime for causing inflation through failed policies and war spending.
By presenting inflation as proof of the regime's incompetence, it creates a moral judgment that legitimizes sanctions.
It does not acknowledge the impact of sanctions themselves on Iran's economy.
China attributes Iran's inflation to unilateral US sanctions and economic warfare.
By framing the crisis as a consequence of American hegemony, China reinforces its own stance against unipolarism.
It does not discuss Iran's domestic economic policies or military spending.
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