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Middle East Military Escalation Could Push 32 Million Into Poverty, UNDP Warns

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Summary

UNDP released a policy brief projecting that ongoing military escalation in the Middle East could push more than 30 million people into poverty across 162 countries, with Gulf region, Asian, Sub-Saharan African, and Small Island Developing States uniquely vulnerable. GTAP modeling assessed economic impacts under scenarios ranging from short-lived disruption to prolonged eight-month shocks, with worst-case projections reaching 32 million additional people in poverty. UNDP Administrator Alexander De Croo emphasized that the shock disproportionately affects countries with the least fiscal room to absorb higher energy and food prices, recommending targeted and temporary cash transfers as a first-line policy defense.

“Under the worst-case scenario, an additional 32 million people could be pushed into poverty.”

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UNDP published a policy brief projecting poverty impacts from the Middle East crisis using Global Trade Analysis Project modeling. The analysis identifies 162 countries at risk, with vulnerable populations in Gulf states, Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Small Island Developing States facing the greatest exposure to economic shocks. The crisis, now in its sixth week and transitioning from acute to an enduring phase, could push an additional 32 million people into poverty under worst-case scenarios.

For governments and policymakers reviewing this analysis, the brief recommends targeted and temporary cash transfers as the preferred first-line response to protect poor and vulnerable households. The estimated cost for effective cash transfers reaches US$6 billion depending on the scenario. The brief also advises temporary subsidies or vouchers for minimum electricity and cooking gas consumption blocks while cautioning against blanket energy subsidies that disproportionately benefit wealthier households. These are advisory recommendations from UNDP, not binding regulatory obligations.

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Apr 23, 2026

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Military escalation in Middle East could push more than 30 million people into poverty worldwide, UN Development Programme warns

Effects of the crisis reach far beyond directly affected countries, falling hardest on the poor and most vulnerable. Targeted and temporary cash transfers are the preferred policy response for fiscally constrained countries

April 13, 2026

Countries in the Gulf region, Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Small Island Developing States are uniquely vulnerable, the brief reveals.

UNDP

New York City, 13 April 2026 ****** - Ongoing military escalation in the Middle East puts tens of millions of people at risk of falling into poverty across 162 countries, according to new projections released today by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP).

While the impacts are concentrated in countries directly affected by the conflict and those dependent on imported energy, the findings point to significant longer-term harm to poorer countries far removed from the fighting.

The findings are published in a new policy brief - Military escalation in the Middle East: Reversals in global development, policy response options – that uses Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) modelling to assess economic impacts under scenarios ranging from short-lived disruption to prolonged shocks lasting eight months.

Now in its 6th week, and despite the temporary ceasefire, the impacts are evolving from an ‘acute’ to an ‘enduring’ phase. The longer this phase continues, the greater the risk of accelerated lapses into poverty in vulnerable countries, the brief reveals. Under the worst-case scenario, an additional 32 million people could be pushed into poverty.

Countries in the Gulf region, Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Small Island Developing States are uniquely vulnerable, the brief reveals.

“War is development in reverse. Conflict can undo in weeks what countries have built over years,” said UNDP Administrator and UN Under-Secretary-General Alexander De Croo. “This new analysis shows that the shock of the escalation of the conflict in the Middle East is not limited to the countries directly affected, but falls disproportionately on those with the least fiscal room to absorb higher energy and food prices. For these countries, the crisis forces impossible trade-offs between stabilizing prices today and funding health, education, and jobs tomorrow. That is unacceptable, and it is preventable. Early policy action matters.”

UNDP sets out policy options for countries to help mitigate the effects of the conflict under each projected scenario. Chief among these is a recommendation that policymakers consider targeted and temporary cash transfers to protect poor and vulnerable households as a first line of defense. Depending on the scenario, as much as US$6 billion in cash transfers would be needed for this measure to be effective.

Other recommendations include temporary and targeted subsidies or vouchers for minimum ‘consumption blocks’ of electricity or cooking gas. The brief cautions against blanket energy subsidies - widely used in developing economies – that disproportionately favour wealthier households over those most in need and are financially unsustainable over time.

The brief is part of a series of socio-economic analyses produced by UNDP on the impacts of the Middle East Crisis in Iran and the region to help policymakers understand the human development consequences and identify options for response. Further analysis covering the Asia-Pacific region is forthcoming.

Read the full report

The full policy brief is available online at www.undp.org/publications/military-escalation-middle-east-reversals-global-development-policy-response-options

Media contact

For more information or to request an interview, please contact:

In New York City – Dylan Lowthian dylan.lowthian@undp.org +1 646 673 6350

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
UNDP
Published
April 13th, 2026
Instrument
Notice
Branch
International
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor

Who this affects

Applies to
Government agencies Public health authorities
Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Poverty impact analysis Policy response recommendations
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Public Health
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
International Trade Financial Services

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