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Bonyad

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Bonyads are controversial charitable trusts in Iran that dominate Iran's non-petroleum economy, controlling an estimated 20% of Iran's GDP.[1] Exempt from taxes and government control, they have been criticized as "bloated," reaping "huge subsidies from government," while siphoning off production to the lucrative black market and providing limited and inadequate charity to the poor.[2]

Background

Founded as royal foundations by Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the original bonyads were criticized for providing a "smokescreen of charity" to patronage, economic control, for-profit wheeling and dealing done with the goal of "keep[ing] the Shah in Power."[3] Resembling more a secretive conglomerate than a charitable trust, these bonyads invested heavily in property development - such as the Kish Island resort - but the developments' housing and retail was oriented to the middle and upper classes, rather than the poor and needy.[4]

After the Iranian revolution, the Bonyads were nationalized and renamed with the declared intention of redistributing income to the poor and families of "martyrs", i.e. those killed in the service of the revolutionary Islamic Iran.

Today, there are over 100 Bonyads,[5] and are criticized for many of the same reasons as their predecessors. They form tax-exempt, government subsidized, consortiums receiving religious donations and answerable directly (and only) to the Supreme Leader of Iran. The Bonyads are involved in everything from vast soybean and cotton fields to hotels to soft drinks to auto-manufacturing to shipping lines. The most prominent, the Bonyad Mostazafan, (Foundation of the Underprivileged), for example, "controls 20% of the country's production of textiles, 40% of soft drinks, two-thirds of all glass products and a dominant share also in tiles, chemicals, tires, foodstuffs."[6]

Criticism

Bonyads are criticized as enormously wasteful: overstaffed,[7] corrupt, and generally unprofitable. In 1999 Mohammad Forouzandeh, a former defense minister, reported that 80% of Iran's Bonyad companies were losing money.[8]

Bonyad companies also compete with Iran's unprotected private sector, whose firms finds it exceedingly difficult to compete when their bonyad competitors have political access to government favors and subsidies and thus do not have to worry about their ventures making a profit in many market segments. These Bonyads, by their very presence, hamper healthy economic competition, efficient use of capital and other resources, and growth.[9]

As charity organizations they are supposed to provide social services to the poor and the needy; however, "since there are over 100 of these organisations operating independently, the government doesn't know what, why, how and to whom this help and assistance is given." Unaccountable to the Central Bank governor, the bonyads "jealously guard their books from prying eyes."[10] Lack of proper oversight and control of these foundations has also hampered the government's efforts in creating a comprehensive social security system in the country undertaken since 2003.[11] Iran has 12 million people living below the poverty line, six million of whom are not supported by any foundation or organization.[12]

Rather than charitable organizations, the bonyads have been described as "patronage-oriented holding companies that ensure the channeling of revenues to groups and milieus supporting the regime," but don't help the poor as a class.[13]

Further reading

See also

References

  1. ^ Molavi, Afshin, Soul of Iran, Norton, (2006), p.176
  2. ^ Mackey, Sandra Iranians, Persia, Islam, and the soul of a nation, New York : Dutton, c1996 (p.370)
  3. ^ Graham, Iran, (1980) p.157, 8)
  4. ^ Graham, Iran, (1980) p.161)
  5. ^ "Ahmadinejad's Achilles Heel: The Iranian Economy" by Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar
  6. ^ NHH Sam 2007, Destructive Competition
  7. ^ "Business: A mess; Iranian privatisation", The Economist. London: Jul 21, 2001. Vol. 360, Iss. 8231; pg. 51
  8. ^ "Business: A mess; Iranian privatisation", The Economist. London: Jul 21, 2001. Vol. 360, Iss. 8231; pg. 51
  9. ^ "Ahmadinejad's Achilles Heel: The Iranian Economy" by Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar
  10. ^ Molavi, Afshin, Soul of Iran (2005) p.176
  11. ^ "Ahmadinejad's Achilles Heel: The Iranian Economy" by Dr. Abbas Bakhtiar
  12. ^ Tehran Times - Poverty in Iran
  13. ^ The Failure of Political Islam by Olivier Roy, translated by Carol Volk Harvard University Press, 1994 p.139