PDA

View Full Version : IRAQ'S ECONOMY BOOMING!!!!



guyone
12-20-2006, 02:47 AM
FROM NEWSWEEK:

In what might be called the mother of all surprises, Iraq's economy is growing strong, even booming in places.

By Silvia Spring
Newsweek International

Dec. 25, 2006 - Jan. 1, 2007 issue - It may sound unreal, given the daily images of carnage and chaos. But for a certain plucky breed of businessmen, there's good money to be made in Iraq. Consider Iraqna, the leading mobile-phone company. For sure, its quarterly reports seldom make for dull reading. Despite employees kidnapped, cell-phone towers bombed, storefronts shot up and a huge security budget—up to four guards for each employee—the company posted revenues of $333 million in 2005. This year, it's on track to take in $520 million. The U.S. State Department reports that there are now 7.1 million mobile-phone subscribers in Iraq, up from just 1.4 million two years ago. Says Wael Ziada, an analyst in Cairo who tracks Iraqna: "There will always be pockets of money and wealth, no matter how bad the situation gets."

Civil war or not, Iraq has an economy, and—mother of all surprises—it's doing remarkably well. Real estate is booming. Construction, retail and wholesale trade sectors are healthy, too, according to a report by Global Insight in London. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce reports 34,000 registered companies in Iraq, up from 8,000 three years ago. Sales of secondhand cars, televisions and mobile phones have all risen sharply. Estimates vary, but one from Global Insight puts GDP growth at 17 percent last year and projects 13 percent for 2006. The World Bank has it lower: at 4 percent this year. But, given all the attention paid to deteriorating security, the startling fact is that Iraq is growing at all.

How? Iraq is a crippled nation growing on the financial equivalent of steroids, with money pouring in from abroad. National oil revenues and foreign grants look set to total $41 billion this year, according to the IMF. With security improving in one key spot—the southern oilfields—that figure could go up.

Not too shabby, all things considered. Yes, Iraq's problems are daunting, to say the least. Unemployment runs between 30 and 50 percent. Many former state industries have all but ceased to function. As for all that money flowing in, much of it has gone to things that do little to advance the country's future. Security, for instance, gobbles up as much as a third of most companies' operating budgets, whereas what Iraq really needs are hospitals, highways and power-generating plants.

Even so, there's a vibrancy at the grass roots that is invisible in most international coverage of Iraq. Partly it's the trickle-down effect. However it's spent, whether on security or something else, money circulates. Nor are ordinary Iraqis themselves short on cash. After so many years of living under sanctions, with little to consume, many built up considerable nest eggs—which they are now spending. That's boosted economic activity, particularly in retail. Imported goods have grown increasingly affordable, thanks to the elimination of tariffs and trade barriers. Salaries have gone up more than 100 percent since the fall of Saddam, and income-tax cuts (from 45 percent to just 15 percent) have put more cash in Iraqi pockets. "The U.S. wanted to create the conditions in which small-scale private enterprise could blossom," says Jan Randolph, head of sovereign risk at Global Insight. "In a sense, they've succeeded."

Consider some less formal indicators. Perhaps the most pervasive is the horrendous Iraqi traffic jams. Roadside bombs account for fewer backups than the sheer number of secondhand cars that have crowded onto the nation's roads—five times as many in Baghdad as before the war. Cheap Chinese goods overflow from shop shelves, and store owners report quick turnover. Real-estate prices have risen several hundred percent, suggesting that Iraqis are more optimistic about the future than most Americans are.

There's even a positive spin to be put on corruption. Money stolen from government coffers or siphoned from U.S. aid projects does not just disappear. Again, says Farid Abolfathi, a Global Insight analyst, it's the "trickledown" effect. Such "underground activity" is the most dynamic part of Iraq's economy, he says. "It might not be viewed as respectable. But in reality, that's what puts money in the hands of the little people."

Meanwhile, Iraq's official economic institutions are making progress, improbable as that might sound in the context of savage sectarian violence and a seemingly complete breakdown of leadership and law. Yet it's a fact. A government often accused of being no government at all has somehow managed to take its first steps to liberalize the highly centralized economy of the Saddam era. Iraq has a debt-relief deal with the IMF that requires Baghdad to end subsidies and open up its gas-import market. Earlier this year the government made the first hesitant steps, axing fuel subsidies—and sending prices from a few cents a liter to around 14. "This has become one important way of institutionally engaging with Iraq," says economist Colin Rowat at the University of Birmingham. "If you lose that engagement, then that means a lot more people have given up on Iraq."

It goes without saying: real progress won't be seen until the security situation clears up. Iraq still lacks a functioning banking system. Though there's an increasing awareness of Iraq as a potential emerging market, foreign investors won't make serious commitments until they are assured a measure of stability. Local moneymen are scarcely more bullish on the long term. In Iraq's nascent bond market, buyers have so far been willing to invest in local-currency Treasury bills with terms up to six months, max.

Iraqna isn't the only success story. There is also Nipal, a money-transfer service that is the backbone of Iraq's cash economy, as well as a slew of successful construction firms in Kurdistan. Such companies are not waiting for Iraq's political crisis to resolve itself. Yet imagine how they would prosper if it did, and how quickly they would be joined by others. As things stand, Iraqna faces extraordinary difficulties. It builds towers but lives in constant fear that they will be blown up. It has to be careful about whom it hires, or where it assigns people to work. Whether Sunni or Shia, it doesn't matter; criminal gangs and militias regularly try to kidnap employees to hold them hostage for ransom, regardless of ethnicity. As for long-range planning? Forget it, says Ziada, the Cairo analyst. "It's a terrible situation for any company."

But again, that's the remarkable thing. In a business climate that is inhospitable, to say the least, companies like Iraqna are thriving. The withdrawal of a certain great power could drastically reduce the foreign money flow, and knock the crippled economy flat.

With Michael Hastings in Baghdad
© 2006 Newsweek, Inc.

White_Male_Canada
12-20-2006, 03:05 AM
Now, you`ll just depress the leftists in here.

A slightly smarmy Newsweek opening with a few 'ya-buts' in there.

How can their economy be getting better each year if there is a "civil war" ? Civil war,that is their Big Lie .

Thing is, the majority of violence is contained in about 3 provinces and things are better than the left-wing media will ever admit.

That said,we can be assured this type of news will not be repeated over and over the way their Big Lies are.

And the sheeple will just bleet in unison, " la-la-la, we can`t hear you."

ezed
12-20-2006, 08:13 AM
FROM NEWSWEEK:

In what might be called the mother of all surprises, Iraq's economy is growing strong, even booming in places.

By Silvia Spring
Newsweek International

[/i]

SHHHHHH!!!!!!! Don't blow it by puffing. If you want the boys to get out. Don't bring attention to successes. Just let it happen.

chefmike
12-20-2006, 08:35 AM
So should the American taxpayer be rejoicing about Iraq's "booming"...LMFAO...economy?

Or just Halliburton et al?

Iraq war spending to approach record


WASHINGTON (Reuters) -- U.S. costs for the Iraq war are likely to exceed $110 billion in the 12-month period that ends in September, approaching the record reached in the 2006 fiscal year, a top White House official said on Tuesday.

That amounts to more than $2 billion a week spent on the war.

Iraq war spending hit an all-time high of $120 billion in fiscal year 2006, which ended on Sept. 30.

*****

The White House is scheduled to unveil its 2008 spending blueprint in early February. Along with the spending proposal, the administration will offer a fresh request for money for the war and will provide updated forecasts for the budget deficit.

Expenditures on the war are escalating, even as public support for the conflict falls.

Portman declined to comment on the costs that would be involved if 20,000 additional troops are sent to Iraq in the near future. Media reports have said that option is under consideration by President Bush, who will unveil an overhauled strategy for the war early in the new year.

Nearly four years into the Iraq war, Bush has maintained a practice of using emergency-spending bills to finance the costs of the war.

But the Iraq Study Group, a high-level panel that recommended a change in course for the war, also suggested that the Iraq war costs be included in the annual budget process to make them more transparent.

Democrats, who are set to take over Congress in January, have also pressed the administration to put the war costs into the regular budget.

The White House has resisted doing so, saying the costs are difficult to predict.

But Portman said that with the unveiling of the budget for 2008, the administration will provide "more information than we have in the past" on estimates for future war spending.

The White House previously had penciled in an estimate of $110 billion for Iraq war costs in the current 2007 fiscal year, which began on Oct. 1.

"That number will end up being low," Portman said.

The U.S. Congress has already appropriated $70 billion for Iraq for the current fiscal year. Reports on Capitol Hill have suggested that the Bush administration may seek a fresh package of spending for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan of $100 billion, which would bring the total war costs for this year to $170 billion.

Portman declined to comment on those reports.

Several American public firms have been awarded U.S. government contracts to help rebuild Iraq, including Fluor Corporation (up $0.20 to $83.14, Charts) and Halliburton (up $0.36 to $32.30, Charts).

http://money.cnn.com/2006/12/19/news/economy/iraq_costs.reut/?postversion=2006121915


KBR agrees to settle Army fraud allegations
Military contractor agrees to pay $8M after Feds claimed firm overcharged U.S. Army for services in Balkans in 1999 and 2000.


November 29 2006: 2:58 PM EST


WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Halliburton subsidiary KBR has agreed to pay $8 million to settle allegations the firm overcharged the U.S. Army for logistical support of military operations in the Balkans in 1999 and 2000.

The allegations involved double billing and delivery of products that did not conform to requirements for use in construction of an Army camp in Kosovo. Other claims involved inflation of prices for various goods resulting from the alleged failure to ensure competitive procurements, the Justice Department said.

"The Department of Justice remains committed to vigorously pursuing allegations of procurement abuses affecting the military," said Peter Keisler, assistant attorney general for the department's Civil Division.

The Justice Department said the settlement resolves allegations that concerned various purchase orders awarded to 10 foreign KBR subcontractors or vendors.

Company spokeswoman Melissa Norcross issued a statement noting that "the government closed its investigation without making allegations of fraud or filing a complaint."

"KBR has agreed to make a payment totaling $8 million to the government, representing an adjustment to the contracts under which KBR provided logistical support to the U.S. military in the Balkans," she said.

"Of that amount, $2.1 million was previously credited to our customer in January 2001 as the result of an internal investigation. The remaining sum will be paid directly to the U.S. Treasury because the appropriations accounts under which a contract credit could have been made have since expired."

KBR also has been the subject of investigations into military contracts it gained to support military operations in Iraq.

Halliburton (up $0.96 to $33.59, Charts) has initiated steps to spin off the KBR unit, which issued an initial public offering of stock earlier this month.

KBR (up $0.03 to $21.98, Charts) shares edged lower in afternoon trade Wednesday on the New York Stock Exchange.

http://money.cnn.com/2006/11/29/news/companies/kbr_settlement/index.htm

guyone
12-22-2006, 06:17 PM
It's still booming...

12-26-2006, 11:08 AM
[b]Military contractor agrees to pay $8M after Feds claimed firm overcharged U.S. Army for services in Balkans in 1999 and 2000.

Do you read your own posts, sheep? If you do, I'm proud of you. It's hard for sheep to learn to read. Even harder for sheep to master comprehension.

Anyhow, I'll just leave you to re-read your own post. Specifically, the quote I've cited.

guyone
12-26-2006, 06:54 PM
And it's booming!!!

chefmike
12-28-2006, 12:25 AM
[b]Military contractor agrees to pay $8M after Feds claimed firm overcharged U.S. Army for services in Balkans in 1999 and 2000.

Do you read your own posts, sheep? If you do, I'm proud of you. It's hard for sheep to learn to read. Even harder for sheep to master comprehension.

Anyhow, I'll just leave you to re-read your own post. Specifically, the quote I've cited.

TotalFool-

That fact just sheds more light on the war-profiteering neocon cabal and it's history of corruption...

It follows them like flies on shit...

Much like you and your ilk follow them, TFool... :lol:

01-13-2007, 06:00 AM
OMGZ! Someone made a profit!

Someone call Howard Deans brigade of European socialists! Oh, and Bill Clinton, too! He was president at the time.