By Khalid Siddig
Since April 2023, Sudan has been engulfed in a
devastating war between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces.
What began as a struggle for power has turned into a national catastrophe. More
than 14 million people have been displaced. Health and education
systems have collapsed and food insecurity threatens over half the
population of about 50 million.
The war has disrupted key sectors, triggering severe
economic contractions, and worsening poverty and unemployment levels.
Sudan’s finance minister reported in November
2023 that the war had resulted in economic losses exceeding US$26 billion
– or more than half the value of the country’s economy a year earlier.
The industrial sector, which includes manufacturing and oil refining, has
lost over 50% of its value. Employment has fallen by 4.6 million jobs over
the period of the conflict. More than 7 million more people have been
pushed into poverty. The agrifood system alone has shrunk by 33.6%. These
estimates exclude informal economy losses.
My research applies economy-wide models to
understand how conflict affects national development. In a recent study,
my colleagues and I used this approach to answer the question: what will happen
to Sudan’s economy and poverty levels if the war continues through 2025?
To assess the economic impact of the conflict, we
used a Social Accounting Matrix multiplier model. This is a tool that captures
how shocks affect different sectors and other agents of the economy, such as
firms, government and households.
Based on our modelling, the answer is devastating:
the conflict could shrink the size of Sudan’s economy by over 40% from 2022
levels, plunging millions more into poverty.
We modelled two scenarios to capture the potential
trajectories of Sudan’s economy.
The extreme scenario assumes a sharp initial
collapse, with a 29.5% contraction in the size of the economy in 2023 and 12.2%
in 2024, followed by a 7% decline in 2025, reflecting some stabilisation over
time.
The moderate scenario, based on World Bank
projections, applies a 20.1% contraction in 2023 and a 15.1% drop in 2024, also
followed by a 7% reduction in 2025, indicating a slower but more prolonged
deterioration.
We estimated the annual figures and report only the
aggregate impacts through 2025 for clarity.
We found that if the conflict endures, the value of Sudan’s
economy will contract by up to 42% from US$56.3 billion in 2022 (pre-conflict)
to US$32.4 billion by the end of 2025. The backbone of livelihoods – agriculture –
will be crippled. And the social fabric of the country will continue to fray.
How we did it
Our Social Accounting Matrix multiplier model used
data from various national and international sources to show the impact of
conflict on the value of the economy, its sectors and household welfare.
We connected this to government and World Bank data
to reflect Sudan’s current conditions.
This allowed us to simulate how conflict-driven
disruptions affect the value of the economy, its sectors and household welfare.
What we found
Under the extreme scenario, we found:
- Gross domestic
product collapse: Gross domestic product (GDP) measures the total value of
all goods and services produced in a country within a year. It’s a key
indicator of economic health. We found that the value of Sudan’s economy could
contract by up to 42%. This means the country would be producing less than
60% of what it did before the conflict. This would affect incomes, jobs,
government revenues and public services. The industrial sector – heavily
concentrated in Khartoum – would be hardest hit, with output shrinking by
over 50%. The value of services like education, health, transport and
trade would fall by 40%, and agriculture by more than 35%.
- Job losses:
nearly 4.6 million jobs – about half of all employment – could disappear.
Urban areas and non-farm sectors would be worst affected, with over
700,000 farming jobs at risk.
- Incomes plummet:
household incomes would decline across all groups – rich and poor, rural
and urban – by up to 42%. Rural and less-educated households suffer the
most.
- Poverty spikes:
up to 7.5 million more people could fall into poverty, adding to the 61.1%
poverty level in 2022. In rural areas, the poverty rate could jump by 32.5
percentage points from the already high rural poverty rate pre-conflict
(67.6% of the rural population). Women, especially in rural communities,
are hit particularly hard. Urban poverty, which was at 48.8% pre-conflict,
increases by 11.6 percentage points.
- The agrifood
system – which includes farming, food processing, trade and food
services – would lose a third of its value under the extreme scenario.
Why these findings matter
Sudan was already in a fragile state before
the war. It was reeling from decades of underinvestment, international
sanctions and institutional breakdown.
The war has reversed hard-won gains in poverty
reduction. It is also dismantling key productive sectors – from agriculture to
manufacturing – which will be essential for recovery once the conflict ends.
Every month of continued fighting adds to the damage and raises the cost of
rebuilding.
Our projections already show major economic
collapse, yet they don’t include the full extent of the damage. This includes
losses in the informal economy or the strain on household coping strategies.
The real situation could be even worse than what the data suggests.
What needs to be done
First and foremost, peace is essential. Without an
end to the fighting, recovery will be impossible.
Second, even as conflict continues, urgent action is
needed to stabilise livelihoods. This means:
- supporting
agriculture in areas that remain relatively safe. Food production must be
sustained to prevent famine.
- restoring
critical services where possible – particularly transport, trade and
retail – to keep local economies functioning
- protecting the
most vulnerable, such as women in rural areas and the elderly, through
expanded social protection and targeted cash assistance.
Third, prepare for recovery. The international
community – donors, development banks and NGOs – must begin laying the
groundwork for post-conflict reconstruction now. This includes investment in
public infrastructure, rebuilding institutions and re-integrating displaced
populations.
The
bottom line
Sudan’s war is more than a political crisis. It is
an economic catastrophe unfolding in real time. One that is deepening poverty,
destroying livelihoods and erasing years of progress.
Our research provides hard numbers to describe what
Sudanese families are already experiencing every day.
The country’s economy is bleeding. Without a shift
in the trajectory of the conflict, recovery could take decades – if it happens
at all.
Khalid Siddig, Senior Research Fellow and Program
Leader for the Sudan Strategy Support Program, International Food Policy
Research Institute (IFPRI)
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