Iraq Economic News and Points To Ponder Sunday Morning 12-28-25

Idle Wealth, Not Imminent Bankruptcy: A Financial Expert Refutes 2030 Scenarios And Reveals To Iraq Observer The Strengths Of The Iraqi Economy.
 
December 20, 2025  Baghdad/Iraq Observer   Parliamentary warnings that  Iraq could face total bankruptcy by 2030 if current spending mechanisms continue   have sparked a wave of controversy in economic circles,  amid questions about the   true state of the country’s finances and its  actual ability to overcome upcoming challenges.

In response to these statements, Mustafa Hantoush, who is concerned with financial and banking affairs,   confirmed that Iraq is considered one of the very rich countries, stressing that    talk of bankruptcy is not based on realistic data  as much as it is related to financial mismanagement.
 
Hantoush explained to Iraq Observer that “the Iraqi government, as a central government,  owns  more than two-thirds of the country’s land, in addition to  factories,  plants, and  extensive real estate assets owned by the state, as well as long-term contracts with millions of citizens,  which constitutes a large economic base that has  not yet been optimally invested.”

He added that   “Iraq does not rely solely on its visible resources,  but also possesses enormous underground wealth,  including oil, gas, and rare minerals,” stressing that “these capabilities make the country a nation capable of rapid recovery  if it has an efficient financial administration that    invests revenues correctly and    seriously combats corruption.

” Hantoush pointed out that  “economic studies confirm that Iraq,  which has an area of ​​about 430,000 square kilometers,    has a high percentage of land suitable for development, as    about 80% of its area is usable,    while only about 8% of it has been invested in the fields of    housing,  agriculture and  industry,   which opens the door to broad development opportunities.”
 
According to experts,  these data reflect that the real challenge facing Iraq    does not lie in the  scarcity of resources or the  risk of bankruptcy, but rather in how to manage and invest wealth,  in a way that transforms great potential into development projects that guarantee a   decent life and   economic stability for future generations.      
https://observeriraq.net/ثروات-معطلة-لا-إفلاس-وشيك-خبير-مالي-يف/    

The Numbers Don't Lie: $340,000 Is The Share Of Every Iraqi In The Wealth Among The Resource Giants... Where Is It?
 
Baghdad Today – Baghdad   Visual Capitalist's global ranking of countries with the most natural resources,
based on per capita wealth, places Iraq sixth on the list of "resource giants."
 
According to the data, Iraq's per capita wealth is approximately $340,000,with an estimated value of its natural resources at around $16 trillion, and a population of approximately 47 million.
 
  [https://baghdadtoday.news/uploads/posts/2025-12/medium/3b56f0accf_111.jpg]
 
This classification doesn't reflect actual income earned by citizens,nor readily available funds in the treasury, but rather the "estimated value" of natural resources relative to the population.
 
In other words, it measures the potential of the country: its underground and above-ground wealth, and how each individual's share would appear if this value were theoretically distributed among the population.

Therefore, a high figure can simultaneously be an  "economic promise" and a  "painful question": why doesn't this abundance translate into  a more stable life,  stronger services, and  wider job opportunities?
 
In the rankings,
Saudi Arabia topped the list with an individual share of nearly $984,000, followed by
Canada with $822,000, then
Australia with $727,000.
Russia came in fourth,
Venezuela fifth,
Iraq sixth,
Iran seventh, the
United States eighth,
Brazil ninth, and
China tenth.
 
The point here is that Iraq, relative to its population, is among a group of countries with very large "natural resources,"so much so that a difference of one or two places in this type of ranking is usually linked to two crucial variables: the  size of the estimated resources and the  size of the population.
 
But transforming “resource wealth” into “societal wealth” doesn’t happen automatically.
 
The difference between a  resource-rich country and a  truly wealthy one is made by  management,   governance, and the  ability to build an economy that operates outside of price fluctuations.
 
Natural wealth may provide a state with financing capacity,  but it alone does not guarantee sustainable development   if revenues remain dependent on a single commodity, or  if returns are eroded by  waste, poor planning, and sluggish productive investment.
 
This is why Iraq appears in such tables as a country with great potential,  while the most important question remains internal:  how much of this potential is being channeled  into  infrastructure,  industry,   agriculture,  education, healthcare, and  job creation?
 
While the ranking highlights the “individual share” as a shocking indicator,   a more realistic interpretation comes from a different angle:
 
Iraq possesses a resource base that offers a rare opportunity to restructure its economy  if it is treated as a lever for building non-rentier sectors, rather than as a permanent guarantee. In other words,
 
the message conveyed by the figure is not so much boasting as it is a warning: possessing wealth is not enough, because   what matters most is “how it is managed” and  how it is transformed   from perceived value into real production, and   from quick profits into long-term assets.
 
For the average citizen, the meaning of this ranking is simple and straightforward: 
a country that appears in this position  theoretically possesses the capacity to  finance major projects,    improve services, and   create jobs  if revenues are channeled along a clear path, and to  build financial resilience   that can absorb market shocks when prices fall.
 
Conversely, a persistent gap between the  "value of resources" and the "reality of living"   means that    wealth remains in the realm of potential, and the   economy remains vulnerable to external fluctuations,   no matter how impressive the figures may appear on paper. In conclusion,
 
Iraq’s ranking in this global classification reopens an old question in a new form:
 
When a country is in the club of “resource giants,”   why does the social return seem less than the numbers suggest?
 
The answer is not in the resources themselves,  but in the path that transforms them    from raw wealth   into a state capable of investment, and  from short-term returns   to development that is measured by what people experience daily.     https://baghdadtoday.news/288949-340.html    

 

For current and reliable Iraqi news please visit:  https://www.bondladyscorner.com

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