
The US-Israel war on Iran and its ripple effect throughout the Middle East have had a devastating impact on Arab countries, with millions expected to slide into poverty, according to the United Nations.
A UN Development Programme (UNDP) report published on Tuesday said that gross domestic product (GDP) in the region was estimated to decline by approximately 3.7 to 6 percent after a month of war, equivalent to a contraction of $120bn to $194bn.
Abdallah Al Dardari, UN assistant secretary-general and director of the UNDP Regional Bureau for Arab States, said that 3.7 million jobs will be lost and about four million more people in the region could fall below the poverty line, noting that the war had highlighted the “fragility in the Arab economy”.
The report was based on projections of “a short but intense conflict lasting for four weeks”, signalling that the impact of the war, which has seen Iran attacking Gulf energy infrastructure and squeezing oil and gas exports through the Strait of Hormuz, will likely be even higher if it drags on longer.
Issued as tight oil supplies pushed Brent crude futures up 4.7 percent to more than $118 per barrel, the report said, “risks in strategic maritime corridors” had “knock‐on effects on inflation, trade flows, and global supply chains” that could undermine livelihoods in the Middle East’s “interconnected economies”.
It added that increases in poverty rates were “concentrated in the Levant and fragile countries (Sudan and Yemen), where baseline vulnerability is highest and shocks translate more strongly into welfare losses”.
The report noted that Lebanon, dragged into the war after Hezbollah struck Israel in retaliation for the US-Israeli killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on February 28, is especially impacted, with “ongoing air strikes and evacuation orders … already causing widespread destruction of residential areas, transport infrastructure, and public services, alongside large‐scale displacement”.
“We hope the fighting will stop tomorrow, as every day of delay has negative repercussions on the global economy,” said Al Dardari.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
'Home Alone' actor Joe Pesci said 'no' to this stunt until he saw a 9-year-old girl do it, says director Chris Columbus - 2
Picking Your Next SUV: 4 Brands Offering Execution, Solace, and Wellbeing - 3
The Best 10 Innovation Advancements of the Year - 4
Kate Hudson, 46, says she doesn't need long workouts to feel good - 5
Most loved Amusement Park Firecrackers Show: Which One Lights Up Your Evening?
Tatiana Schlossberg, a granddaughter of JFK, is dead at 35 after cancer diagnosis
How to Build a Yard That Helps Monarchs During Spring Migration
Can scientists detect life without knowing what it looks like? Research using machine learning offers a new way
Young Muslims in Germany feel left out of Mideast debate, experts say
Thousands of New York City nurses set to strike Monday if deal isn't reached with hospitals
The Job of a Migration Legal advisor: How They Can Help You
Kids get diseases like lupus, too. As researchers hunt better treatments, this camp brings joy
Huge rotating structure of galaxies and dark matter is detected
Vote in favor of Your Number one BWM Vehicles












