Jordan and the Syrian Humanitarian Crisis

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Socioeconomic Burdens:

The negative impact of the Syrian crisis on Jordan has manifested itself in three different but interrelated manners:

  • Increased pressure on public finance, worsened trade deficit and losses to key economic sectors.
  •  Exacerbated vulnerabilities for the poorest segments of the Jordanian population; crowding out Jordanians from the informal labour sector and driving wage rates downwards.
  • Deterioration of access to quality basic services in the most affected governorates.

Syrian crisis reduced GDP growth by 2% in 2013.

6 Key areas under enormous strain:

Education: Schools going back to double-shift with 41% of Jordanian public schools now crowded.

  • 86,966 Syrian students in Jordanian schools.
  • 3k on waiting lists.
  •  90k more eligible for enrolment that are not in schools.

Health: 

  • Hospitals stretched to the limit.
  • Some medicines running short.
  • Long eradicated diseases reappearing.

Housing:

  • Rental prices have inflated up to 200% in some areas.

Water: 

  • Zaatari refugees consume 4 million litres of water daily.
  • Jordan is one of the world's poorest countries in terms of water resources and refugees are severely straining Jordan's water supply. 

Agriculture:

  • 25% decline in agricultural exports to Syria.
  • 30% decline in imports.
  • Led to losses of livelihoods in agriculture and food trade.

Social tensions:

  • Price of commodities went up.
  • Competition for scarce jobs and limited housing availability.