Myanmar's economy set to contract as floods and fighting take heavy
toll, the World Bank says
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[December 11, 2024] By
ELAINE KURTENBACH
BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar’s economy is forecast to contract this year, the
World Bank said Wednesday, as flooding and fighting take a severe toll
nearly four years after the military ousted its elected government
headed by Aung San Suu Kyi.
In an update issued Wednesday, the bank said about a fifth of all built
structures and a tenth of Myanmar’s roads had been damaged by widespread
flooding during heavy monsoon rains and a typhoon that swept through the
country in September. About 2 million people were left homeless, the
report said.
Meanwhile, fighting between the military and opposition forces remains
fierce in some parts of the country, disrupting farming and
manufacturing.
“The level and intensity of armed conflict remains high, severely
affecting lives and livelihoods, disrupting production and supply
chains, and heightening uncertainty around the economic outlook,” it
said.
Overall, the report said the economy will likely contract 1% in annual
terms in the April-March fiscal year.
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Pro-democracy guerrillas and ethnic minority armed forces seeking
autonomy have been battling the Myanmar army after it took power in
early 2021, when generals ousted the elected government of Aung San Suu
Kyi
The United Nations estimates that 3.5 million people, or about 6% of the
population, have been displaced from their homes, more than half the
country's townships are embroiled in conflict and construction of major
projects has been delayed, the report said.
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Local residents wade through flooded water at a broken bridge, in
Naypyitaw, Myanmar, Sept. 17, 2024. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo)
 The U.N. special envoy for Myanmar
recently warned that the Southeast Asian nation is in crisis, with
conflict escalating, criminal networks “out of control” and human
suffering at unprecedented levels.
Julie Bishop, a former Australian foreign minister, warned that
Myanmar risks becoming a “forgotten crisis.”
Adding to the troubles, disruptions from the conflict have helped to
undermine the value of Myanmar's currency, the kyat, which lost 40%
of its value against the dollar in informal trading in the first
eight months of the year, the World Bank report said.
That helped push inflation to more than 25%, while food prices
increased more than 60% between April and September, it said.
Arrivals of international tourists are at about one-fifth the level
before double shocks of the COVID-19 pandemic and the military
takeover, and manufacturing has also weakened as electricity
blackouts disrupt production.
Myanmar's military administration stopped publishing trade data in
mid-2024, the report said, but an analysis of data from its trading
partners showed that garments and natural gas exports, which account
for a large share of all its exports, fell more than 11% in
April-September from a year earlier.
The report's assessment of the outlook was for a further
deterioration in conditions if fighting intensifies.
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