Iran's store owners take to the streets in anger.
It's world business express from the BBC World Service.
I'm Liana Byrne.
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We're starting in the Iranian capital Tehran.
That's the sound of shopkeepers demonstrating for a second successive day shouting Basharov,
which means dishonourable in Persian.
A slogan they were directing at the government,
annual inflation is running at over 40% and business owners are angry at the rapid devaluation of the currency,
the real, partly due to pressure of Western sanctions.
Ahrash Azizi is an Iranian journalist based in the US.
It has lost half of its value in the last year, but even if you go a little more,
it's third of what it was just like 18 months ago.
So people lose their savings.
They're really affected
because much of the things you have to buy are linked to the international market in Bombay or the other.
And many people deal with foreign currency more directly.
Their job is linked to it in Bombay or the other,
where they have to buy commodities in the global market.
So the fact that Iran is doing really bad and the economy is in a terrible condition and people's,