Lebanon's economy to contract in 2024 under war pressure: EBRD
Students hold a Lebanese flag during a protest in solidarity with the Lebanese and Palestinian people and to condemn the Israeli airstrikes in Lebanon and Gaza at Sana'a University, Sanaa, Yemen, Sept. 25, 2024. (EPA Photo)


The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) said Thursday that it expected Lebanon's economy to decline further this year under the pressure of geopolitical turmoil, forecasting contraction.

Lebanon's economy will contract by 1% in 2024, the EBRD predicted, heavily revising its earlier estimation made in May that the struggling economy would grow slightly.

Israel's war in Gaza has already impacted neighboring countries' economic growth and fighting is now heightening in Lebanon.

"Any escalation will certainly weigh down on growth," Beata Javorcik, the EBRD's chief economist, told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The country, already facing difficult economic conditions and sky-high inflation, has lost more than 40% of its gross domestic product (GDP) since 2018, the bank said in a report.

It added that "political impasse and stagnant progress on critical reforms continued to hold back recovery."

Meanwhile, amid Russia's war on Ukraine, the Russian economy grew 4.7% in the first half of 2024, as the price of the country's oil exports offset the impact of Western sanctions.

"The price of Russia's oil exports is estimated to have increased by more than 10% year on year and trade with non-sanctioning economies has been strong," the bank said, pointing to China as a key driver of the country's economic growth.

The EBRD expects the 2024 full-year growth to be 3.6%, revising upward its estimation made in May by 1.1%.

However, Javorcik told AFP that "next year there will be a significant slowdown" in the country's growth as there are signs that the Russian economy is "overheating."

The EBRD was founded in 1991 to help former Soviet bloc nations embrace free-market economies but has since extended its reach to the Middle East and North Africa (MENA).

The economies of the countries where the EBRD operates are expected to grow by 2.8% this year, slightly less than the bank previously estimated.

It attributes this to "a weaker outlook for advanced Europe, stagnating mining output in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, the ongoing conflict in Gaza and Lebanon, and severe droughts in Morocco and Tunisia."