President Hassan Rouhani said on Saturday said Iran is open to American investors.
“One of the renowned American economic executives asked me once to exhort the US government into removing hurdles on the way of our trade,” he said without revealing any names, Press TV reported.
“Iran has never blocked the presence of American investors in the country,” Rouhani addressed the High-Level Symposium on Industrial and Trade Policies: Promoting Exports and Developing Employment in Tehran.
His statements came amid reports that the Obama administration has warned against a rush by Western companies to invest in Iran's oil industry and other businesses.
According to Reuters, the US State Department recently cabled a “demarche” to embassies around the world to reiterate that sanctions on Iran are still in place.
"The United States wants to tell governments not to get ahead of themselves when dealing with Iran," the news agency cited an unnamed London-based diplomatic source as saying.
Rouhani also said that there is a global surge of interest in new business opportunities in Iran, adding the country is ready to open its arms to international entrepreneurs including Americans if they bring in investment and technology.
“We are witnessing a global fascination with the lucrative environment for economic activity in Iran,” the president added.
“We are ready to host and invite foreign entrepreneurs if they bring investment and technology to Iran where a part of our 80-million market could be placed at their disposal and a joint exports market created for both sides,” he added.
The government is pushing to fire economic growth after bringing down inflation from more than 40 percent at the start of President Rouhani's office in 2013 to an annual rate of around 15 percent.
Rouhani said his administration is targeting a single-digit inflation rate. However, the effort is a delicate balancing act since the government’s monetary controls are hampering its other bid to bring the economy out of a nagging stagnation.
According to the International Monetary Fund’s biannual World Economic Outlook published last week, Iran's economy is seen growing only 0.8 percent this year before expanding 4.4 percent in 2016.
“Last year, we saw economic growth and got out of recession but we may slip back to recession,” Rouhani said on Saturday.
The July nuclear accord is expected to open the floodgates to foreign investment and breathe a new lease of life into Iran’s business environment after sanctions are lifted.
Over the past few months, government ministers from Germany, Britain, France, Italy, Japan and India have taken business delegations to Iran to explore grounds for new trade.
Japan is the latest major US ally aiming to resurrect trade relations with Iran, sending Foreign Minister Fumio Kishida to Tehran on Monday.