COVID-19, coup d'état and poverty: compounding negative shocks and their impact on human development in Myanmar
COVID-19, coup d'état and poverty: compounding negative shocks and their impact on human development in Myanmar
April 1, 2021
Myanmar has made significant achievements in poverty reduction over the last decade. Despite such this, analyses of available data prior to the COVID-19 pandemic show that millions of people in Myanmar had remained vulnerable and at risk of falling into poverty in the face of negative shocks, which could rollback progress and cause setbacks in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
This report presents UNDP research findings and analysis of data collected prior and during the COVID-19 pandemic in Myanmar on the socioeconomic impacts of both the pandemic and the ongoing coup d’état. The study warns that, if unchecked, the combined effect of these two crises could push up to 12 million people into poverty. That could result in as many as 25 million people - nearly half of Myanmar’s population - living below the national poverty line by early 2022, a level of impoverishment not seen in the country since 2005. Without rapid corrective actions on economic, social, political and human rights protection policies, these scenarios will put Myanmar’s efforts to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030 well out of reach. As a dire and complex situation unfolds - characterized not only in humanitarian terms but also as a deep crisis in development, democratization, and human rights - international support will play an important role in safeguarding the wellbeing of the Myanmar population.
This report is available in English and Myanmar language.