New World Bank Report Assesses Impact of Conflict on Lebanon’s Economy and Key Sectors
Damages & Losses estimated at US$8.5 billion
WASHINGTON, November 14, 2024 – The cost of physical damages and economic losses due to the conflict in Lebanon is estimated at US$8.5 billion, according to a new World Bank report that provides an initial assessment of the impact of conflict on Lebanon’s economy and key sectors. The Lebanon Interim Damage and Loss Assessment (DaLA) finds that damages to physical structures alone amount to US$3.4 billion and that economic losses have reached US$5.1 billion.
In terms of economic growth, the conflict is estimated to have cut Lebanon’s real GDP growth by at least 6.6% in 2024. This compounds five years of sustained sharp economic contraction that has exceeded 34% of real GDP.
The report also looks at the impact of the conflict on the people of Lebanon. There are over 875,000 internally displaced persons in Lebanon, with women, children, the elderly, persons with disabilities, and refugees at highest risk. An estimated 166,000 individuals have lost their jobs, corresponding to a loss of US$168 million in earnings.
Housing has been the hardest hit sector, with almost 100,000 housing units partially or fully damaged, amounting to $3.2 billion in damages and losses. Disruptions to commerce are amounting to close to US$2 billion, driven in part by the displacement of employees and business owners. The destruction of crops, livestock and the displacement of farmers has driven agricultural losses and damages of about US$1.2 billion.
The Lebanon Interim Damage and Loss Assessment draws on remote data sources and analytics to assess physical damage and economic losses across seven key sectors. The damage assessment covers the six most conflict-affected governorates, while economic losses are assessed nationwide whenever data allows. Data collection was finalized as of October 27th for four sectors covered (commerce, health, housing, tourism/hospitality) and as of September 27th for the other three (agriculture, education, environment).
A comprehensive Rapid Damage and Needs Assessment (RDNA) that assesses economic and social losses as well as financing needs for reconstruction and recovery will be completed when the situation allows. The cost of damages, losses and needs estimated through a comprehensive RDNA is expected to be significantly higher than that of this interim assessment.
To respond to the current crisis facing the country, the World Bank is activating emergency response plans to re-direct existing resources to support the urgent needs of people in Lebanon.
Contacts
In Washington
Ashraf Al-Saeed
aalsaeed@worldbank.org
In Beirut
Zeina El Khalil
zelkhalil@worldbank.org