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Biblioteca The Impact of the Syrian Conflict on Lebanese Trade

The Impact of the Syrian Conflict on Lebanese Trade

The Impact of the Syrian Conflict on Lebanese Trade

Resource information

Date of publication
Mayo 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/21914

The devastating civil war in Syria is
arguably one of the major civil conflicts in recent times.
The conflict started with protests in March 2011 and soon
after escalated to a violent internal war with no end in
sight to this date. The conflict has by the end of 2014
caused well in excess of 150,000 fatalities, and 6 million
internally displaced people (UN), and led 3 million refugees
to move out of the country (UNHCR). Beyond the human
tragedy, the conflict has disrupted the functioning of the
economy in many ways. It has destroyed infrastructure,
prevented children from going to school, closed factories
and deterred investments and trade. The economic effects of
the war extend beyond the country’s borders affecting also
the neighboring countries. In particular trade is one of the
main channels through which the effects of the crisis are
transmitted to neighboring countries. For example, the
demand for goods and services in Syria is likely to have
fallen thus affecting the many exporters to Syria in
neighboring countries. Moreover, to the extent that Syria
has become harder to cross, the war may have made trade
through Syria more difficult. At the same time producers in
neighboring countries may have replaced Syrian producers in
Syria and in other markets as their productive assets in
Syria were destroyed. This report examines the effects of
the Syrian war on the Lebanese economy via one of the most
important channels through which the economic impact of the
war occurs, i.e. the trade channel. In doing so, it partly
updates and extends the previous economic assessment of
World Bank (2013b) carried out last year. Focusing
specifically on trade allows us to examine in more depth the
trade effects than that report was able to do. Indeed, we go
beyond the effects on aggregate and sectoral imports and
exports to also examine the effects on exports at firms’
level, comparing the effects in Lebanon with those in other
neighboring countries, including Jordan, Turkey and Iraq.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Calì, Massimiliano
Harake, Wissam
Hassan, Fadi
Struck, Clemens

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