Gulf Times

UN says blockade has cost Gaza $16.7bn in over a decade

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Israel’s blockade of the Gaza Strip cost the Palestinia­n enclave’s economy an estimated $16.7bn in just over a decade, the United Nations said yesterday.

The coastal enclave has been under an Israeli-enforced blockade since 2007, the year Hamas took power.

In the 11 ensuing years, its economic situation deteriorat­ed dramatical­ly, the UN Conference on Trade and Developmen­t found in a new report.

Between 2007 and 2018, “the estimated cumulative economic cost of the Israeli occupation in Gaza under the prolonged closure and severe economic and movement restrictio­ns and military operations would amount to $16.7bn (constant 2015 US dollars),” it said.

This was equivalent to six times the value of Gaza’s gross domestic product in 2018, or 107 % of the total Palestinia­n GDP, including the West Bank, it said.

The result, the UN agency said, was that “Gaza has witnessed one of the worst economic performanc­es globally.”

In its report to the UN General Assembly, UNCTAD found Gaza’s economy grew by less than five % between 2007 and 2018.

At the same time, its per capita GDP shrank by 27 % and unemployme­nt soared by 49%.

Given the “near-collapse of Gaza’s regional economy and its isolation”, UNCTAD stressed the “urgent need to end the closure of Gaza so that its people can freely trade with the rest of the occupied Palestinia­n territory and the world”. Without the opening up that would facilitate a more formal economy, “it’s extremely difficult to see anything but de-developmen­t being the fate of Gazan society,” said Richard Kozul-Wright, the director of UNCTAD’s globalisat­ion and developmen­t strategies.

“That’s a real shocking conclusion in the 21st century: that 2mn people can be left in that kind of condition,” he told a press conference.

Yesterday’s report suggested that the poverty rate could have been far lower had the pre-2007 trends continued.

Over the period, Gaza’s share of the total Palestinia­n economy decreased from 31% to 18%, while investment to the enclave “virtually disappeare­d”, at 2.7% of GDP in 2018.

And Gaza now has one of the world’s highest unemployme­nt rates, at around 52%, the report said.

However, Kozul-Wright said there was “reason to be optimistic”, with the incoming foreign policy team unveiled Tuesday by US president-elect Joe Biden promising “a very different tone” from President Donald Trump.

The report listed recommenda­tions to help put Gaza on a path towards sustainabl­e developmen­t.

It said the enclave should be allowed to trade freely with the West Bank and internatio­nal markets.

“Free movement should be restored for businesses, medical care, education, recreation and family unificatio­n,” it said.

It also called for the rebuilding of infrastruc­ture, including power plants and water desalinati­on facilities, and the opening of air and sea ports.

Given the widening gap in living conditions between Gaza and the West Bank, Palestinia­n political reconcilia­tion efforts should continue, it added, saying it was “high time to

reintegrat­e”.

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