Syria’s civil war that raged for years since 2011 led millions to flee the fighting. While many sought out Europe via Turkey, neighbouring Lebanon—a tiny country of only five million—faced a deluge. That has now grown into a demographic dilemma. Initially, Syrians entered Lebanon through legal border crossings, but after the Lebanese government stopped registering new refugees, it expanded into illegal crossings and the use of smuggling routes.
The World Bank’s updated report Lebanon: Economic and Social Impact Assessment of the Syrian Conflict provides a picture of the current reality up to June 2024. Syrian labour is not necessarily a bad thing. Historically, Syrians have been the backbone of Lebanon’s agriculture and construction industries. But this tended to be seasonal work, and Lebanon was already home to 500,000 Palestinian refugees, homeless since 1948.
Lebanon now hosts “the highest concentration of refugees in the world relative to its population,” according to the World Bank. With economic conditions in the country dire, there is now a risk that tensions between hosts (Lebanese) and guests (Syrians) could boil over.
Profuse and costly
With the spread and prevalence of Syrian refugees across almost every Lebanese town, some sectors of government and society have used this to stoke fears that this presence will shrink Lebanon's job market and drain its limited resources.
But herein lies the quandary. The Lebanese economy cannot survive without a young Syrian labour force, but an economy programmed for just a few million Lebanese and suffering from major structural problems also struggles to accommodate so many Syrians. It is also being asked to accommodate the needs of the Syrian economy. Ravaged by war, sanctions, and corruption, Damascus needs Lebanon to secure imports.
Today, there are an estimated 1.5 million Syrian refugees in Lebanon, with no immediate prospect of being able to return home. Meanwhile, the Lebanese increasingly see Syrians as worsening their own economic prospects. Initial sympathy for Syrians' plight has now grown into serious concern about Lebanon's—especially with the return of the balance of payments gap. The burden to sustain these refugees falls on Lebanon—averaging around $1.5bn per year.
International support
The European Union recently offered Lebanon €1bn "in support for vital sectors", but some Lebanese saw this as a "bribe" for them to stop demanding the return of refugees to their country of origin and to stop the flow of migrants to Europe from Lebanon.
Read more: €1bn European grant to Lebanon raises eyebrows
Al Majalla got an early glimpse of the latest World Bank report, before being officially released. It includes a paper from Samir Daher, economic adviser to Prime Minister Najib Mikati, which was presented to ministers in Brussels.
According to the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), Lebanon has 1.5 million registered and unregistered refugees. However, most do not live in official refugee camps, reflecting a policy that aims to learn from the Palestinian experience.
There is roughly one Syrian refugee for every four Lebanese, with the visitors scattered across the country—particularly on the peripheries of urban centres in the north and east. The largest concentration of registered Syrian refugees (around 24%) is in the agricultural Bekaa valley, followed by Mt Lebanon (21%), Northern Lebanon (15%), Southern Lebanon (7.3%), Nabatiyeh (3.8%), and Beirut (1.5%).
In all areas, host communities are generally in bigger cities – more than 90% – making the challenge of meeting refugees' needs predominantly an urban challenge.