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Supervisor Elham AbolFateh
Editor in Chief Mohamed Wadie
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Iran's Economic Collapse Is Driving Society from Reform to Regime Change


Mon 29 Jun 2026 | 12:35 PM
SEENews

Iran's worsening economic crisis has entered a new phase in which the issue is no longer merely inflation or declining living standards, but the erosion of the regime's political legitimacy. Record inflation, the collapse of purchasing power, and expanding nationwide protests indicate that growing segments of Iranian society have moved beyond demands for reform toward fundamental political change.

In this regard, Hossein Daei al-Islam, member of the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), stated:

"Iran's economic disaster is not simply the result of sanctions. It is the direct consequence of a political system that has spent decades diverting the nation's wealth toward repression, nuclear ambitions, and regional interventions instead of economic development and public welfare."

He added:

"Even official statistics published inside Iran reveal the depth of the crisis. Food inflation has reached unprecedented levels, most families now spend the majority of their income on basic necessities, employment opportunities continue to decline, poverty is expanding, and the national currency keeps losing value."

According to Daei al-Islam, the crisis has evolved into a comprehensive political and social challenge.

"The dramatic rise in bread prices, water shortages, electricity outages, and deteriorating public services have drawn broader sectors of society into protest. Workers, students, farmers, women, professionals, and ordinary citizens increasingly recognize that these hardships stem from the structure of the ruling system itself."

He further noted that the growing internal disputes among the regime's factions over negotiations with Washington demonstrate the depth of the leadership's crisis.

"These conflicts are no longer about policy differences; they reflect competing attempts to preserve a system facing unprecedented internal pressure."

Concluding his remarks, Daei al-Islam said:

"The Iranian people have largely moved beyond expecting cosmetic reforms. A growing national consensus is emerging that the country's economic and social crises cannot be resolved without ending the system that created them. Iran's future will ultimately be decided by its people and their organized Resistance, working to establish a democratic republic based on freedom, the separation of religion and state, and respect for human rights."