Reconstruction succeeds or fails on information quality. “Reconstruction Data” is NextIran’s public framework for what must be measured, published, verified, and continuously updated so a free-market Iran can rebuild fast — without corruption, without fantasy numbers, and without “trust us” governance.
This page is designed to be pro-investor, pro-citizen, and pro-rule-of-law: clear standards, auditable reporting, and predictable disclosure. No politicized statistics. No hidden liabilities. Just a shared factual baseline that lets the private sector price risk, mobilize capital, and deliver results.
Reconstruction Data is organized into eight pillars. Each pillar includes: definitions, minimum reporting requirements, verification expectations, and a publication cadence.
What the market needs to know, continuously:
GDP (nominal/real), inflation (CPI/PPI), unemployment, labor participation
Exchange-rate regime, FX liquidity indicators, reserves disclosure standard
Fiscal balance, primary balance, public debt stock, maturity profile
Current account, trade balance, remittances, FDI flows
Investor use: pricing sovereign risk, forecasting demand, financing terms, currency exposure.
The fastest way to poison reconstruction is hidden obligations.
Full budget (central + subnational) with line-item comparability
Arrears: contractors, pensions, utilities, public payroll, subsidies
SOE disclosure (financials, intercompany debt, guarantees)
Procurement transparency: tenders, bidders, award logic, change orders
Asset register: public land, buildings, concessions, mineral rights
Non-negotiable principle: no “off-book” procurement.
Reconstruction is electricity, water, and fuel — not speeches.
Grid capacity, generation mix, loss rates, reliability metrics (SAIDI/SAIFI)
Natural gas supply chain metrics; refinery uptime; fuel distribution
Water: reservoirs, desalination, leakage, quality testing, usage by sector
Wastewater capacity, discharge compliance, flood control inventory
Investor use: bankability of projects, O&M realities, tariff reform planning.
If Iran is to be a rules-based trade hub, the data must prove it.
Ports, rail, road: throughput, bottlenecks, maintenance backlog
Customs: dwell time, inspection rates, digitalization coverage
Warehousing, cold chain, last-mile capacity maps
Corridor performance indicators (cost per ton-km, time-to-clear, reliability)
Outcome focus: publish performance, not propaganda.
People don’t live in macro charts.
Housing stock survey: habitability, rebuild cost bands, land title clarity
Urban services: transit, waste, schools, clinics, emergency response
Displacement and return metrics (verified, not inflated)
Construction capacity: materials, labor skills, permit timelines
Investor use: demand forecasting, project staging, labor constraints.
Reconstruction is a private-sector competition — if rules are real.
Business registry modernization (time to register, licensing steps)
Credit bureau coverage, collateral registry, insolvency timelines
SME survival rate, sector employment, wage bands, skills gap mapping
Export readiness metrics and standards compliance capacity
Key metric: how quickly a lawful firm can start, hire, import, and export.
Capital hates opacity; it flees uncertainty.
Bank balance-sheet transparency, NPL definitions, provisioning standards
Payments system modernization; AML/KYC rulebook and enforcement metrics
Capital controls status and roadmap; repatriation rules clarity
Pipeline visibility: PPP projects, concession frameworks, risk allocation
Investor use: deciding whether capital can enter, operate, and exit safely.
The market needs a scoreboard.
Court backlogs, contract enforcement timelines, arbitration recognition
Property rights: title disputes, land registry completeness
Anti-corruption: procurement audit rate, conflict-of-interest disclosure
Public service performance: permits, inspections, dispute resolution time
Simple truth: growth follows predictable enforcement.
A plain-English dashboard for citizens and investors:
Key macro indicators
Infrastructure uptime and reliability
Procurement and project delivery metrics
Labor and housing rebuild indicators
Sector and corridor overlays that show:
Where projects are bankable now
Where bottlenecks require public first-mover action
Where legal or capacity risks still block private capital
A standardized pipeline including:
Pre-feasibility, feasibility, tender stage, award stage
Financing structure and risk allocation summary
Timelines, responsible agency, and dispute forum
Reconstruction Data is only credible if it is verifiable.
Primary-source first: raw inputs prioritized over narratives
Cross-checking: multiple independent sources where possible
Audit trails: revision history and methodology notes
Anti-misuse: clear labeling for estimates vs measured values
When data is uncertain, we say so — and we show the range.
Monthly: macro dashboard, inflation, trade, FX liquidity indicators
Quarterly: public finance, arrears, SOE summaries, labor metrics
Semiannual: infrastructure condition, housing stock assessments
Annual: full national accounts revisions, asset registers, long-term plans
Reconstruction Data is built on free-market and democratic fundamentals:
Transparency is policy, not a slogan
Comparable reporting across time (no moving goalposts)
Open competition in procurement and concessions
Clear property rights and contract enforcement
Predictable rules for investors and equal access for citizens
Underwrite demand and tariff risk with real operating metrics
Price legal and currency risk with disclosed rules and timelines
Identify “first wins” — projects that can move immediately under rule-of-law conditions
Stage reforms: tariffs, permitting, customs, inspections
Prioritize bottlenecks that unlock private capital
Replace political announcements with measurable outcomes
Track service restoration honestly
Compare promises to delivery
Demand accountable procurement and on-time projects
Not a political messaging hub
Not an excuse to delay decisions with endless studies
Not a substitute for lawmaking, courts, and credible institutions
Not a place for inflated numbers designed to impress outsiders
Reconstruction Data is an execution layer for NextIran’s core commitments:
Rule-based governance
Free-market competition
Integration with global finance and trade
A growth model that respects civil liberties and property rights
In short: the data tells the truth, so the market can do its job.