According to a UNDP report, conflict and military tensions in West Asia have created a risk of pushing 2.5 million people in India towards poverty

According to the UNDP report, the conflict and military escalation in West Asia threatens to push 2.5 million people in India into poverty, and the country is projected to experience some loss in its human development progress.

About the Report

¨     The findings are based on the UNDP report titled “Military Escalation in the Middle East: Human Development Impacts Across Asia and the Pacific.”

¨     The report assesses impacts across 36 countries, drawing from 22 UNDP country offices, CGE simulations, and external analytical inputs.

¨     It considers a 28-day conflict scenario with extended adjustment (up to 8 months) to estimate economic and human development impacts.

¨     It highlights that the crisis is not just a geopolitical issue but a human development shock, transmitted through rising fuel prices, increased freight and insurance costs, supply chain disruptions and higher input costs.

¨     These factors collectively reduce purchasing power, increase food insecurity, strain public finances, and weaken livelihoods.

Key Findings of the Report

¨     Rising Poverty and Economic Losses:Globally, poverty could increase from 1.9 million to 8.8 million people across scenarios.South Asia bears the largest burden, with 1.7 million to over 8 million people pushed into poverty.Asia-Pacific could face economic losses between $97 billion and $299 billion (0.3–0.8% of GDP).

¨   India-Specific Impact:Poverty rate projected to rise from 23.9% to 24.2%.Around 2.46 million additional people likely to fall into poverty.Total poor population may increase to 354 million (from ~351.6 million).China may see a moderate increase (115,000 to 620,000 people) due to smaller proportional shocks.

¨ Human Development Setbacks (HDI Impact):The UNDP simulation estimates the impact of the conflict on the Human Development Index (HDI) for countries across the region.Iran’s HDI could decline by an amount equivalent to roughly one to one and a half years of human development progress.India is projected to experience a loss of approximately 0.03–0.12 years of HDI progress.Nepal is projected at around 0.02–0.09 years and Vietnam at 0.02–0.07 years.For China, the estimated effects on HDI remain limited in magnitude, ranging roughly 0.01–0.05 years.

¨   Economic and Output Losses:Output losses in Asia-Pacific could range from roughly US$97 billion to US$299 billion, equivalent to 0.3 to 0.8 percent of regional GDP.South Asia accounts for the largest losses in both absolute and relative terms.East Asia registers sizeable absolute losses but modest proportional declines.

¨   Transmission Channels:The shock is affecting people through multiple and reinforcing channels.Energy is the dominant transmission pathway, with 33 out of 36 countries reporting high vulnerability to oil-price shocks.Over 80 percent of crude and liquefied natural gas transiting the Strait of Hormuz is destined for Asian markets.Rising living costs are squeezing poor and near-poor households.Food and fertilizer price increases, hitting ahead of key planting cycles, threaten to deepen food insecurity.

¨     India’s External Dependence:India meets more than 90% of its oil needs through imports.More than 40% of crude imports and 90% of LPG imports come from West Asia.West Asian countries supply more than 45% of India’s fertilizer imports.85% of the country’s domestic urea production depends on imported regasified liquefied natural gas.West Asian markets account for 14% of exports and 20.9% of imports.Roughly $48 billion in non-oil exports include basmati rice, tea, gems and jewellery, and apparel.

¨   Food Security and Agriculture Risks:Food security pressures could be compounded by remittance losses.Reduced Gulf economic activity weakens household incomes and purchasing power.In India, the timing is especially sensitive as disruptions coincide with preparations for the Kharif season.Urea stocks stood at 6.114 million tonnes, providing a near-term buffer but not fully insulating the sector.

¨     Remittances and Migration:India has the largest absolute exposure to Gulf labour markets.9.37 million Indians were residing in Gulf Cooperation Council countries as of October 2024.They send about 38–40% of India’s inward remittances.The scale of direct exposure to Gulf labour markets and remittance flows is both substantial and consequential.

Employment and MSME Impact

¨     Employment risks are high, especially in MSME-intensive sectors:

¨     Around 90% of India’s workforce is informal.

¨     Small firms face higher input costs, supply shortages, and delayed orders.

¨     Likely impacts include Job losses, reduced working hours, and business disruptions.