Iran chamber of commerce publishes wartime regional economic resilience blueprint

Iran's Chamber of Commerce, Industries, Mines and Agriculture Research Centre has published a policy document outlining a "cellular economy" model designed to maintain economic function at the provincial level amid the disruptions of the ongoing war.
The document, published on March 29, defines each Iranian province as a "semi-self-sufficient economic cell" with minimum capacity to meet vital needs, sustain production and manage financial flows independently, while remaining integrated within a national network.
The centre said the framework was developed in response to recent geopolitical developments and rising uncertainty in the country's economic environment, drawing on international experience of managing wartime crises and structural disruptions.
The model shifts away from centralised economic patterns towards distributed ones, strengthening intra-regional links and restructuring supply chains through what the document calls intelligent localisation.
The stated aim is to reduce vulnerability from geographic concentration, prevent disruptions in one area from spreading across the broader economy and preserve key economic functions during crisis conditions.
The document provides operational guidelines across three levels: provincial policymakers and chambers of commerce, border provinces as support nodes in the economic network, and individual businesses.
Key recommendations include geographic diversification of economic activity, strengthening local markets, developing regional financial networks, establishing alternative supply chains and prioritising liquidity preservation for businesses.
The centre said the model was intended not only to increase short-term national economic resilience but also to lay the groundwork for targeted and balanced reconstruction in the post-war period, strengthening the role of the private sector and provincial chambers in managing the economy under exceptional conditions.

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