![]() Oxfam International estimates that “it could take more than a decade for the world’s poorest to recover from the economic impacts of the pandemic.” ![]() For the first time in 22 years, extreme poverty-people living on less than $1.90 a day-was on the rise last year. Supply chains disrupted during the pandemic have seen food prices skyrocket, while in the global recession humanitarian aid budgets are being slashed, bringing many countries to the brink of famine. People in fragile states, already suffering from diminished trust in their government, have felt further abandoned as they face disruptions in public services, rising food prices, and massive economic hardships, such as unemployment and reduced wages. The group found a collapse of public confidence in governments and institutions was a key driver of instability. A new study by Mercy Corps examining the intersection of COVID-19 and conflict found concerning trends that warn of potential for new conflict, deepening existing conflict, and worsening insecurity and instability shaped by the pandemic response. The global risk firm Verisk Maplecroft has warned that as many as 37 countries could face large protest movements for up to three years. The same is true for much of Latin America and Asia, where countries don’t have enough vaccines to protect their populations and simmering sources of protest-such as rising living costs and deepening inequalities-are more likely to boil over. A majority of Africa is lagging far behind the world in vaccinations, meaning COVID-19 will continue to constrain national economies and, in turn, become a source of potential political instability. The global vaccine shortage is fueling the instability. Droughts and locusts are coming at a critical time for farmers ready to plant crops and are stopping herders in their tracks from driving their livestock to greener pastures. Countries such as Ethiopia and Sudan are among the world’s worst humanitarian crises, with catastrophic levels of hunger. Take the Sahel, where, due to a toxic cocktail of conflict, COVID-19 lockdowns, and climate change, the scale and severity of food insecurity continues to rise. The impacts of climate change and environmental degradation have only compounded the despair. The United Nations estimates around one-tenth of the global population-between 720 million people and 811 million-were undernourished last year. It has also exposed weaknesses in food security and dramatically increased the number of people affected by chronic hunger. History is full of examples of pandemics being incubators of social unrest. COVID-19 has ripped open economic divides and made life harder for already vulnerable groups, including women and girls and minority communities. Underlying it all this time around is a pervasive inequality. ![]() History is full of examples of pandemics being incubators of social unrest, from the Black Death to the Spanish flu to the great cholera outbreak in Paris, immortalized in Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables. The efforts to contain it may have curbed fatalities in the short term but have inadvertently deepened vulnerabilities that laid the groundwork for longer-term violence, conflict, and political upheaval and should serve as a danger sign to world leaders as countries reopen-including in the United States. The coronavirus pandemic was a once-in-a-century crisis that not only shocked countries’ existing health systems but also demanded a response that impacted-and was itself shaped by-economic, political, and security considerations. And they are merely a foreshadowing of the post-coronavirus global tinderbox that’s looming as existing tensions in countries across the world morph into broader civil unrest and uprisings against economic hardships and inequality deepened by the pandemic. But they all faced a perfect storm of preexisting social, economic, and political hardships, which fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic only inflamed further. From Cuba to South Africa to Colombia to Haiti, often violent protests are sweeping every corner of the globe as angry citizens are taking to the streets.Įach country has different histories and realities on the ground, particularly in Haiti, where years of violence and government corruption culminated two weeks ago in the assassination of President Jovenel Moïse. To call 2021 the summer of discontent would be a severe understatement.
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