Showing posts with label Global economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Global economy. Show all posts

Monday, May 04, 2026

Global tensions and rising poverty: How war hurts low‑income workers most

 

An image of struggling low‑income workers facing rising living costs due to global conflict, revealing economic hardship and inequality.
An image of struggling lowincome workers facing rising living costs due to global conflict, revealing economic hardship and inequality.

 

Global tensions involving Iran, America, and Israel are deepening poverty among lowincome workers as inflation, instability, and rising living costs spread across continents.


Many people describe the situation as an IranIsrael war, but the United States involvement has undeniably expanded the conflicts economic impact. When a superpower enters a geopolitical confrontation, markets react instantly, supply chains tighten, and the cost of essential goods rises.


Whether one agrees with the political framing or not, the economic consequences are visible in fuel prices, food costs, transportation, and basic services. For millions of lowincome workers, these shocks are not abstract; they are daily struggles that push them closer to poverty.


The belief that US involvement has worsened global hardship is rooted in observable economic patterns. American sanctions on Iran reduce oil exports, tightening global supply and driving up fuel prices. Military operations in the Persian Gulf and Red Sea increase shipping risks, forcing vessels to reroute and raising insurance and transport costs.


These disruptions ripple through global markets, affecting everything from supermarket shelves to electricity bills. Investors also react to US foreign policy decisions, causing currency fluctuations and commodity price spikes that hit importdependent countries the hardest.

 

Related post: The US government is responsible for the Russian-Ukrainian war

 

In this sense, peoples assumptions are not unfounded: the broader the conflict becomes, the more the world economy absorbs the shock. The impact on daily life is felt first through fuel and energy prices. The Middle East remains a critical artery for global oil supply, and any instability in the Strait of Hormuz immediately pushes up fuel costs.


Higher fuel prices raise transportation fares, electricity bills, and manufacturing expenses. For lowincome workers, who already spend a large share of their income on energy, this creates an unbearable financial burden. Food prices follow the same pattern. Attacks on shipping routes in the Red Sea have forced vessels to take longer routes around Africa, adding weeks to delivery times and increasing costs.

 

Supermarkets raise prices, restaurants adjust menus, and farmers pay more for fertilizer and fuel. Families living on minimum wages feel these increases most sharply because food consumes the largest portion of their income.


Housing and rent have also become more difficult to manage. Inflation pushes central banks to raise interest rates, making mortgages more expensive and slowing construction. Landlords respond by increasing rent, leaving lowincome families vulnerable to eviction or forced into overcrowded living conditions.


Healthcare is similarly affected as global supply chain disruptions cause shortages of essential medicines and raise the cost of imported medical supplies. For workers living paycheck to paycheck, even basic healthcare becomes a luxury. Job security is another casualty of global instability.


Companies facing higher operating costs freeze wages, reduce staff, or shift workers to temporary contracts. Lowincome workers, already the most vulnerable, are the first to lose stability. Lowincome workers suffer the most because they live in a fragile economic ecosystem with no financial cushion.


They spend nearly all their earnings on necessities, food, rent, transport, and utilities, leaving no room to absorb sudden price increases. When inflation rises, they cannot save, invest, or adjust their spending. Instead, they fall into debt, skip meals, delay medical care, or face homelessness.


Meanwhile, middle and highincome groups can cut nonessentials, rely on savings, or shift investments. The poor have no such options. Many also work in sectors most affected by inflation, transport, retail, hospitality, and agriculture, where wages rarely rise in line with the cost of living. As a result, inequality widens, and poverty deepens.


Governments can take meaningful steps to protect lowincome workers from the economic fallout of global conflict. Strengthening social protection systems, through food subsidies, energy support, unemployment benefits, and child allowances, can prevent families from falling into extreme poverty.


Regulating the prices of essential goods such as fuel, electricity, and staple foods can stabilize household budgets during crises. Increasing the minimum wage to reflect the real cost of living is essential, as stagnant wages during inflation amount to silent exploitation.


Governments should also invest in affordable housing, expand public transport, and reduce taxes on lowincome earners to give them more disposable income. Supporting local food production can reduce dependence on volatile global supply chains and protect national food security.


The Iran–America–Israel conflict is more than a geopolitical confrontation; it is a global economic earthquake whose shock waves are pushing millions of lowincome workers deeper into poverty. Rising prices, unstable markets, and disrupted supply chains have made life harder for those already struggling to survive.


While governments cannot control global conflicts, they can control how they protect their citizens. The poor should not bear the heaviest burden of wars they did not choose, and urgent policy action is needed to ensure that economic justice remains a priority in times of global instability.


Thursday, July 14, 2011

AFRICA's TRADE AND ECONOMIC GROWTH WITH THE US


Africa and the US trade


Africa and the US trade


Africa is a continent that answers the need for all raw materials required by advanced countries, including the United States of America. 

In regard to Africa's economic growth, the US will maintain a good relationship with Africa, said Ron Kirk, US Trade Representative, in his recent official tour to Tanzania.

Discussing the importance of trade-in promoting economic growth in Africa and the US, with international trade, students from the University of Dar es Salaam and Mzumbe University, Ambassador Ron Kirk said there was an urgent need to prepare the next generation of government and business leaders for the demands of an increasingly competitive global economy.

Tanzania is one of the numerous African countries blessed with extraordinary natural resources with and the US wants to maintain good relations. As the next generation leaders, you need to lead the way in taking advantage of those resources, so that Tanzania can realize its full potential," said Ron Kirk to the students.

Kirk, whose trip highlighted the strong partnership between the US and Tanzania, focused on the progress made under AGOA, but also discussed the need to do more to increase US exports to Africa, to support America's economic recovery at home. 

He commended Tanzania for being one of the only four countries worldwide to be selected for President Obama's new Partnership for Growth (PFG) initiative, which seeks to promote broad-based economic growth in developing countries.

The other countries for PFG are Ghana, El Salvador, and the Philippines. The US exports to Tanzania grew by 3.6 percent between 2009 and 2010, rising to 164 million dollars.