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For a country where oil accounts for roughly 90 percent of government revenues, the stakes could hardly be higher.
Iraq reportedly exported around 100 million barrels of oil per month under normal conditions. Last month, however, exports reportedly fell to just 18 million barrels—a staggering decline that has sent shockwaves through financial markets and government institutions alike.
Such a dramatic contraction would leave Baghdad facing a massive budget shortfall almost overnight. With salary obligations consuming a large share of monthly expenditures, even a short disruption could trigger severe political and social consequences.
The Iraqi state is, in many ways, a salary machine. When that machine stalls, instability follows.
According to emerging discussions within Iraq's financial circles, the Ministry of Finance may be forced to choose between three highly risky options.
Baghdad could issue bonds to local banks, effectively borrowing from Iraq's own financial system. While this would provide immediate liquidity, it would also place pressure on banking sector reserves and potentially limit private-sector lending.
This is the fastest option—and arguably the most dangerous. Expanding the money supply without corresponding economic output could fuel inflation, weaken the Iraqi dinar, and erode household purchasing power.
History offers a blunt lesson: governments rarely print their way out of crises.
International loans would buy time, but at a cost. Iraq could find itself increasingly dependent on foreign creditors, potentially pledging future oil revenues in exchange for emergency financing.
That would mortgage tomorrow to survive today.
The Kurdistan Region remains heavily dependent on federal budget transfers, particularly for public-sector salaries. Any delay or disruption in Baghdad's ability to pay would almost certainly reverberate across Erbil, Sulaymaniyah, and Duhok.
For Kurdish citizens already frustrated by repeated salary delays, another federal fiscal crisis could deepen public anger and intensify political tensions.
The economic relationship between Baghdad and Erbil has always been fragile. A sustained oil shock could make it even more volatile.
Salary delays in Iraq are never merely economic events—they are political detonators.
Public-sector workers form the backbone of Iraq's middle class and a critical pillar of political stability. Any prolonged inability to meet payroll could spark demonstrations, weaken Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani's government, and embolden rival political factions.
In Iraq, unpaid salaries quickly become a national security issue.
The Bigger Strategic Picture
The crisis exposes Iraq's enduring vulnerability: an economy overwhelmingly reliant on oil and dangerously exposed to regional geopolitical shocks.
As long as Iraq remains dependent on a single export route and a single commodity, every regional escalation will threaten domestic stability.
The Strait of Hormuz is not merely a waterway for Iraq—it is an economic lifeline.
If regional tensions persist, Baghdad may soon be forced into painful choices that carry long-term consequences for the dinar, inflation, and Iraq's fiscal sovereignty.
For ordinary Iraqis, the question is brutally simple: will salaries arrive on time?
For policymakers, the larger question is even more urgent: how many more shocks can Iraq's oil-dependent economy absorb before the system itself begins to crack?
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