Escalation in the Middle East reverses more than a year of economic growth in the Arab States region, according to new UN Development Programme assessment

hard-won development gains could be wiped out with up to 4 million people pushed into poverty

March 31, 2026
Photo: UNDP Palestinian

Amman & New York – New estimates by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) suggest the military escalation in the Middle East, now into its fifth week, may cost economies in the region from 3.7 to 6.0 percent of their collective Gross Domestic Product (GDP). This represents a staggering loss of US$120-194 billion and exceeds the cumulative regional GDP growth achieved in 2025. Coupled with an estimated rise in unemployment of up to 4 percentage points or 3.6 million jobs lost—more than the total jobs created in the region in 2025, these reversals will push up to 4 million people into poverty. The assessment — “Military Escalation in the Middle East: Economic and Social Implications for the Arab States region” — exposes the concerning reality of structural vulnerabilities characteristic to the region, which enable a short‑lived military escalation to generate profound and widespread socio‑economic impacts that may persist over a long-term. 

“This crisis rings alarm bells for countries of the region to fundamentally reevaluate their strategic choices of fiscal, sectoral, and social policies, representing an important turning point in the development trajectory of the region,” said Abdallah Al Dardari, UN Assistant Secretary General and Director of the Regional Bureau for Arab State in UNDP. “Our findings underline the pressing need to strengthen regional collaboration to diversify economies—beyond reliance on growth driven by hydrocarbons, and to expand production bases, secure trade and logistics systems, and broaden economic partnerships, to reduce exposure to shocks and conflicts.” 

The assessment employs Computable General Equilibrium modelling to capture the magnitude of disruptions caused by a four-week conflict, and models its effects through key transmission channels, including increased trade costs, temporary productivity losses, and localized capital destruction. It conducted five simulation scenarios, representing escalating levels of conflict scenarios, ranging from a “moderate disruption,” where trade costs increase by tenfold, to an “extreme disruption and energy shock,” where trade costs increase a hundred-fold, intensified by a stop of hydrocarbon production. 

The findings highlight that impacts are not uniform, varying significantly across the region due to structural characteristics of its main subregions. Estimates suggest that the largest macroeconomic losses are concentrated in Gulf Cooperation Council and the Levant subregions, where strong exposure to trade disruptions and energy market volatility drives significant declines in output, investment, and trade. Both subregions stand to lose 5.2-8.5 percent and 5.2-8.7 percent of their GDP, respectively. Increases in poverty rates are concentrated in the Levant and Least Developed Arab Countries, where baseline vulnerability is highest and shocks translate more strongly into welfare losses. In North Africa, impacts remain moderate but still significant in absolute terms.  

In the Levant the crisis is expected to increase poverty by 5 percent, pushing an additional 2.85-3.30 million people into poverty—accounting for over 75 percent of the rise in poverty across the region. Across the region, human development as measured by the Human Development Index (HDI) is expected to decline by approximately 0.2 to 0.4 percent, corresponding to a setback of roughly half a year to nearly one year of human development progress.  

 

For more information and to arrange interviews, please contact: 

Riad Sabbagh | Senior Communication Consultant | Regional Bureau for Arab States | riad.sabbagh@undp.org  

Ahmed Bazzoum | Communication Specialist | Regional Bureau for Arab States | ahmed.bazzoum@undp.org  

Noeman AlSayyad | Strategic Communications Advisor | Regional Bureau for Arab States | noeman.alsayyad@undp.org  

 

Note to Editors 

  • The Assessment will be available online—as the embargo is lifted—through the following link. The Arabic version will follow shortly. 
  • This Assessment if part is part of a series of rapid assessments that UNDP is producing on the impacts of the Middle East military escalation on Iran, the Arab States region, Africa, the Asia Pacific region and on the global development outlook. 
  • Results presented in this brief should be interpreted as illustrative estimates of potential outcomes under different shock intensities, rather than realized impacts.  
  • Impact estimates are presented for four Arab States subregional groupings, including: 
  • Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries, including Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates 
  • The Levant, including Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, the State of Palestine and Syria 
  • North Africa, including Algeria, Egypt, Libya Morocco and Tunisia 
  • Least Developed Arab countries (LDCs), including Sudan and Yemen—insufficient data did not allow for simulating impacts on Djibouti and Somalia. 
  • Summary of Impacts: 
Macroeconomic Impact | GDP 
Region Loss of 3.7 - 6.0 % equivalent to US$120.00-194.00 Billion 
GCC Loss of 5.2 - 8.5 % equivalent to US$103.00-168.00 Billion 
Levant Loss of 5.2 - 8.7% equivalent to US$17.30-28.90 Billion 
N Africa Gain of 0.0 - 0.4 % equivalent to US$0.09-3.20 Billion 
LDCs Loss of 0.1 - 0.5 % equivalent to US$0.07-0.32 Billion 

 

Unemployment Impact | Jobs lost 
Region Increase by 1.8 - 4.0 % equivalent to 1.61-3.64 Million jobs lost 
GCC Increase by 3.6 - 9.4 % equivalent to 1.17-3.11 Million jobs lost 
Levant Increase by 2.3 - 2.7 % equivalent to 0.32 Million jobs lost 
N Africa Increase by 0.1 % equivalent to 0.06 Million jobs lost 
LDCs Increase by 0.2 – 0.8 % equivalent to 0.05-0.20 Million jobs lost 

 

Poverty Impact | Additional population pushed below poverty line   
Region Increase by 0.70 - 1.00 % equivalent to 3.05 - 3.96 Million people  
GCC Not caluculated due to very low baseline  
Levant Increase by 4.45 - 5.15 % equivalent to 2.85 - 3.29 Million people 75%of total 
N Africa Increase by 0.03 – 0.05 % equivalent to 59 – 103 Thousand people  
LDCs Increase by 0.15 - 0.60 % equivalent to 137 – 560 Thousand people  

 

Human Development Impact | HDI | Year of progress set back  
Region Decrease by 0.2 – 0.4 % equivalent to 0.5 – 1.0 Years set back  
GCC Decrease by 0.3 - 0.5 % equivalent to 1.2 – 2.0 Years set back  
Levant Decrease by 0.4 - 0.7 % equivalent to 0.9 – 1.5 Years set back  
N Africa Increase by 0.0 - 0.1 % equivalent to Slight gain forward  
LDCs Decrease by 0.0 - 0.1 % equivalent to Small but significant set back due to low HDI baseline