Frank26
What I find to be the trigger, the lynch pin to all of this is the HCL...The HCL definitely has to have a new rate.
They would have used 1300 or any sanctioned rate inside the last 20 years by now...But they never did...Because they are talking about it on a daily basis,...going to pass many of the laws of the HCL,...have not used any sanctioned rates...we're going to see a new rate.
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๐️๐ฎ๐ถ The HCL: The Missing Piece That Could Change Everything
Many investors continue to focus on banking reforms, international agreements, foreign investment, and economic development. While all of these are important, what stands out as the true trigger—the lynchpin connecting everything together—is the Hydrocarbon Law (HCL).
Why?
Because for more than two decades Iraq has debated, revised, delayed, and renegotiated the framework governing the distribution of oil and gas revenues between Baghdad, the Kurdistan Region, and the Iraqi people. Yet despite all the discussions, governments, and parliamentary sessions, one question remains:
Why has Iraq never fully implemented the HCL using the existing exchange rates that have existed over the last 20 years?
If the current sanctioned rates were sufficient for a long-term solution, one could argue that the law would have been finalized and activated years ago. Iraq has operated under multiple exchange rate environments, including rates around 1170, 1190, 1460, and now 1300 IQD per dollar. Yet the HCL remains one of the most discussed and unfinished pieces of legislation in modern Iraqi history.
What makes this noteworthy is that Iraqi officials continue to discuss the HCL almost daily. Parliament continues to revisit key provisions. Committees continue negotiations. Political blocs continue to emphasize its importance. Despite all the delays, the issue has never disappeared.
That raises an interesting possibility:
What if the final implementation of the HCL requires an economic environment different from the one Iraq has operated under for the last two decades?
The HCL is not simply an oil law. It is fundamentally about revenue sharing, citizen benefits, provincial allocations, regional agreements, and long-term economic stability. Every distribution formula inside the law ultimately depends on the value and purchasing power attached to those revenues.
From this perspective, some observers believe the reason Iraq has not fully activated the HCL under previous exchange rates is because policymakers expect a future monetary framework that better reflects Iraq's economic potential, oil wealth, and expanding role in global markets.
Over the last several years Iraq has:
✅ Modernized its banking sector.
✅ Increased foreign reserves.
✅ Expanded non-oil investment initiatives.
✅ Strengthened regional and international economic partnerships.
✅ Pursued financial reforms aligned with international standards.
✅ Continued negotiations surrounding the HCL.
When viewed together, these developments appear less like isolated events and more like pieces of a larger economic puzzle.
The argument many analysts make is simple:
The HCL is too important to Iraq's future to be implemented under conditions that policymakers believe are temporary or transitional.
If that view proves correct, then the final passage and implementation of the HCL may not simply represent another law being passed. It could signal that Iraq believes its economic foundation, revenue structure, and monetary framework are finally ready for the next stage.
Whether that ultimately includes a new exchange rate remains to be seen. But for many observers, the continued focus on the HCL suggests that it remains one of the most important indicators to watch in Iraq's long-term economic transformation.
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