An oil economy turns to gold
Iraq’s economy runs on oil — petroleum exports dominate government revenue and foreign earnings. Like other hydrocarbon states, it accumulates reserves from those earnings, and in recent years it has chosen to direct a growing share of them into gold. The Central Bank of Iraq has been a notable buyer, adding meaningfully to its holdings and lifting the reserve to 175 tonnes.
The accumulation reflects a desire for stability in an economy long buffeted by shocks. After decades scarred by war, sanctions and the rise and fall of the Islamic State, Iraq has every reason to value an asset that holds its worth through turmoil and carries no foreign counterparty. Gold offers exactly that — a tangible store of national wealth insulated from the instability that has defined so much of the country’s recent history.
The dollar question
Iraq’s gold buying also unfolds against a particular monetary backdrop. The country’s financial system has been tightly bound to the U.S. dollar — its oil is sold in dollars, and its access to the global dollar system runs through arrangements with the United States. In recent years that access has at times been constrained as Washington has sought to police dollar flows and curb their leakage to sanctioned neighbors.
For Baghdad, the experience has underlined the vulnerability of depending on another power’s currency and financial plumbing. Gold, held domestically, answers that vulnerability directly: it is national wealth that no external authority can switch off. Iraq’s accumulation is part of the same broad reassessment of dollar dependence reshaping reserves across a region acutely conscious of the leverage that control of the dollar confers.
Gold and regional stability
Iraq sits at one of the most contested crossroads in the world, bordering Iran, Turkey, Syria, Saudi Arabia and more, and caught between competing regional and global powers. In such a setting, the strategic appeal of gold is heightened: an asset beyond the reach of any neighbor or distant capital is worth more to a nation whose fortunes can turn on the decisions of others.
Building a substantial gold reserve is, for Iraq, a quiet assertion of sovereignty and a hedge against an uncertain neighborhood. It signals an intent to anchor the nation’s monetary foundations in something solid as the country continues its long, difficult reconstruction — a foundation that does not depend on the goodwill of any external partner.
A reserve still being built
At 27% of total reserves, gold has become a significant component of Iraq’s holdings, and the trajectory has been upward. Iraq belongs to the cohort of Middle Eastern and emerging economies that have turned decisively toward gold in the 2020s, joining the record central-bank buying that has redrawn the demand side of the market.
Iraq’s reserve is, in that sense, a work in progress — a holding being deliberately enlarged as the country seeks to put its monetary house on firmer ground. For a nation that has endured more instability than almost any other in recent memory, the steady accumulation of gold is a modest but meaningful step toward resilience: wealth it can hold, at home, whatever comes next.
Where the gold is held
The Central Bank of Iraq holds the national gold reserve, with holdings kept domestically in Baghdad and, in keeping with common practice, portions held abroad. Iraq has expanded its reserve through purchases in recent years.