Tuesday, February 10, 2026

JEFF: CONFIRMED IN PRINT: IRAQ ADMITS THE NEXT GOVERNMENT WILL CONTROL THE EXCHANGE RATE CHANGE

Introduction: When Analysis Gets Confirmed in Black and White

Sometimes the most important moments are not rumors or leaks — they are official confirmations in print.

In a recent article titled:

“Acknowledging the financial crisis… MP: Changing the dollar exchange rate is within the purview of the next government”

Iraq has now openly stated what analysts like Jeff have been saying all along.

The power to change the exchange rate does not belong to the current caretaker government.

It belongs to the next fully formed government.

And just like that — confirmation arrives.


Official Admission: The Next Government Controls the Exchange Rate

No More Guessing, No More Assumptions

The article makes it clear:

  • Iraq acknowledges a financial crisis

  • Exchange rate authority rests with the next government

  • Any change to the dollar rate must wait

This is not interpretation.


This is policy reality.

As Jeff put it plainly:

“What did I tell you? We’re waiting on the completion of the next government to change the rate. Bam. Right here — confirmed in print.”


Why the Current Government Cannot Change the Rate

Caretaker Status Has Limits

Iraq’s current administration:

  • Manages daily operations

  • Pays salaries

  • Maintains basic stability

But it cannot introduce major monetary changes, including:

  • Exchange rate adjustments

  • Structural banking reforms

  • International currency activation

That authority belongs solely to a newly seated government with full constitutional powers.


The Second Confirmation: Budget Reform Stalled Since 2009

And the Reason Is the Same

In another article, an economist stated:

“Budget reform has been stalled since 2009.”

Why would a country delay reform for over 15 years?

According to Jeff’s analysis, the answer is simple:

They are waiting for the exchange rate to change.


Why Budget Reform Depends on the Exchange Rate

You Can’t Reform What You Can’t Use

Budget reform is not just about numbers — it depends on:

  • A functional banking system

  • International settlements

  • Foreign currency interaction

But here’s the problem:

  • The dinar is not yet internationally tradable

  • Iraq’s effective trading currency remains the U.S. dollar

  • Sanctions and compliance rules limit foreign transactions

Without a tradable dinar, budget reform cannot function properly.


Banking Reforms and Foreign Currency Handling

The Missing Link

A major part of Iraq’s banking reform involves:

  • Foreign currency handling

  • Cross-border trade

  • International banking compliance

If the dinar cannot:

  • Trade freely

  • Settle internationally

  • Interact with other currencies

then banking reform remains theoretical — not operational.

That is why reforms have been stalled, not abandoned.


Sanctions, Compliance, and Going International

Why Timing Is Everything

Sanctions and international oversight demand:

  • Transparency

  • Stability

  • A recognized exchange rate

  • A tradable national currency

Iraq cannot “go international” financially until:

  1. A new government is formed

  2. The exchange rate is introduced internally

  3. The dinar becomes tradable

The sequence matters — and Iraq is following it.


Featured Snippet: The Core Confirmation

Iraq has officially confirmed that changing the dollar exchange rate is the authority of the next government, validating why budget and banking reforms have remained stalled since 2009.


Jeff’s Key Point: This Was Always the Plan

According to Jeff:

  • The delay was never confusion

  • The reforms were never canceled

  • The rate change was never abandoned

Everything has been waiting on one trigger:

The completion of the next government.

When that happens:

  • The exchange rate can be introduced

  • Banking reforms can activate

  • Budget reform can finally move forward


Why This Matters More Than Headlines Admit

Many focus on daily political drama.

But this confirmation tells us something deeper:

  • Iraq knows the problem

  • Iraq knows the solution

  • Iraq knows who has the authority

The system is paused — not broken.


Q&A: What This Confirms

Q: Who can change Iraq’s exchange rate?

A: Only the next fully formed government.

Q: Has Iraq admitted to a financial crisis?

A: Yes, officially.

Q: Why has budget reform been stalled since 2009?

A: Because it depends on a tradable dinar and exchange rate change.

Q: Can banking reforms happen before the rate change?

A: No. Foreign currency handling requires a tradable national currency.

Q: Is this speculation?

A: No. These confirmations now appear in official articles.


Key Takeaways

  • Iraq admits to a financial crisis

  • Exchange rate authority belongs to the next government

  • Budget reform stalled since 2009 for a reason

  • Banking reforms depend on a tradable dinar

  • The delay is structural, not accidental

  • Jeff’s analysis is now confirmed in print


Final Thoughts: When Reality Catches Up to Analysis

This is the moment analysts wait for.

When:

  • Articles confirm the timeline

  • Officials confirm the authority

  • And the logic finally becomes public

The message is clear:

Nothing moves until the next government is complete.

And once it is — the door opens.


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#IraqCrisis #ExchangeRate
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Jeff  

 Article:  "Acknowledging the financial crisis...MP: Changing the dollar exchange rate is within the purview of the next government"  They're saying the next government is the one that's going to have the powers to control changing of the dollar exchange rate...What did I tell you?  We're waiting on the completion of the next government to change the rate.  Bam.  Right here, confirmed in print...They're the ones that introduce the rate change within the country of Iraq...I love it when my work is confirmed.

  They announced in this article "An economist says budget reform has been stalled since 2009"   Why They're waiting for the rate to change.  Part of the banking reforms have to do with foreign currency - handling and dealings...If the dinar is not tradable, which right now their tradable currency is the US dollar, they're not able to trade, interact and work with foreign currencies due to sanctions waiting for the rate to change, going international, having a tradable currency.


JEFF: CONFIRMED IN PRINT: IRAQ ADMITS THE NEXT GOVERNMENT WILL CONTROL THE EXCHANGE RATE CHANGE

Introduction: When Analysis Gets Confirmed in Black and White Sometimes the most important moments are not rumors or leaks — they are  offic...