The
war in Syria has plunged 80 percent of its people into poverty, reduced
life expectancy by 20 years and led to massive economic losses
estimated at over $200 billion since the conflict began in 2010,
according to a UN-backed report circulated Wednesday.

The Syrian Center for Policy Research
painted a devastating picture of the "systematic collapse and
destruction" of Syria's economic foundations in the report, saying the
nation's wealth, infrastructure, institutions and much of its workforce
have been "obliterated”.
Almost three million Syrians lost their jobs
during the conflict, which meant that more than 12 million people lost
their primary source of income, it said, and unemployment surged from
14.9 percent in 2011 to 57.7 percent at the end of 2014.
"As huge swatches of the community have lost
the opportunity to work and earn an income, just over 4 in 5 Syrians
now live in poverty," the report said. "As it has become a country of
poor people, 30 percent of the population have descended into abject
poverty where households struggle to meet the basic food needs to
sustain bare life."
The report said the four-year-old conflict
coupled with the country's economic disintegration and social
fragmentation have resulted in a 15 percent drop in Syria's population -
from 20.87 million in 2010 to just 17.65 million at the end of last
year.
Syria now has the second-largest refugee
population in the world after the Palestinians, with 3.33 million people
fleeing to other countries, it said. In addition, 1.55 million Syrians
left the country to find work and a safer life elsewhere while 6.8
million fled their homes but remain in Syria, it said.
The report, supported by the UN Development
Program and the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, said that as Syria's
economy continues to deteriorate, total GDP loss is estimated at
$119.7b - accounting for 59 percent of the overall economic loss of
$202.6b by the end of 2014.
As violence intensified, it said, the number
of deaths in the conflicts rose dramatically to 210,000. Together with
the 840,000 wounded, this represented 6 percent of Syria's population
killed or injured during the conflict, it said.
"Equally horrendous is the silent disaster
that has reduced life expectancy at birth from 75.9 years in 2010 to an
estimated 55.7 years at the end of 2014, reducing longevity and life
expectancy by 27 percent," the report said.
It said education is also "in a state of collapse" with 50.8
percent of school-age children no longer attending school during
2014-2015 and almost half losing three years of schooling.
Source: Associated Press
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