The escalation of US-Israeli military operations against Iran in early March has unleashed economic turmoil across South Asia, demonstrating the profound vulnerability of global energy supply chains to geopolitical instability. As tensions flared around the strategically critical Strait of Hormuz—a passageway for approximately 20 million barrels of daily oil shipments representing nearly one-fifth of global consumption—the immediate shockwaves radiated far beyond the Gulf’s confined shipping channels.
Across Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, and Nepal, households and governments alike are grappling with severe economic consequences. The region’s deep dependence on imported energy—India sources 40% of its gas from Qatar alone—has left national economies exposed to global market volatility. With limited domestic production capabilities and frequently unstable currencies, even moderate oil price increases create immediate fiscal pressure and household budgetary strain.
In Pakistan, petrol prices surged by approximately 55 rupees (20 cents) per liter, reaching record highs that compelled transport operators to implement 15-20% fare increases. Lahore bus driver Ahmed Khan reported his daily diesel expenses jumping from 6,000 to 7,000 rupees virtually overnight, forcing fare adjustments that directly impact commuters. The inflationary spiral extends to food markets, with Karachi vegetable vendors reporting 10% price hikes within a single week due to increased transport costs—particularly devastating during Ramadan when families carefully budget for traditional foods.
The Pakistani government has enacted austerity measures including school closures, university transitions to online instruction, and implementation of a four-day workweek for public offices. Cabinet members have voluntarily surrendered two months’ salaries, yet economists warn sustained oil prices above $100 per barrel could add 2-3 percentage points to February’s already troubling 23% inflation rate.
Bangladesh, which imports approximately 95% of its energy needs, has implemented fuel rationing limiting purchases to 40 liters per transaction. Dhaka resident Fatima Begum reported waiting four hours for generator fuel essential for coping with increasingly frequent power outages now lasting up to six hours daily. The energy crisis has severely impacted the nation’s critical garment industry, with factory shifts shortened due to electricity instability—directly reducing workers’ overtime earnings.
India, ranking as the world’s third-largest oil importer, has witnessed petrol prices climbing 12% in Delhi alongside rising diesel costs. The government has released five million barrels from strategic reserves, but Mumbai taxi driver Rajesh Singh exemplifies the personal impact, describing how nearly his entire earnings now flow directly into fuel expenses with minimal remaining for savings. Higher transport costs are already inflating food prices, with Kolkata onion wholesale rates increasing 10% alongside climbing cooking gas cylinder prices approaching 950 rupees in rural Uttar Pradesh.
Smaller economies face even more severe challenges. Sri Lanka, still recovering from its 2022 financial crisis, has seen 18% petrol price increases alongside new restrictions on non-essential imports. Nepal has reduced fuel supplies by 20%, triggering transport strikes that disrupt food deliveries and further inflate staple prices.
Energy analyst Fatima Rahman from the Institute of Strategic Studies Islamabad notes: ‘South Asia’s energy systems remain deeply tied to Gulf oil. When a geopolitical shock hits the Strait of Hormuz, the economic shock reaches households here within days.’ The crisis disproportionately affects lower-income families who allocate 15-20% of their budgets to food and energy—triple the percentage spent by wealthier households.
Kolkata-based energy specialist Anirban Mukherjee identifies a crucial lesson: ‘Energy security cannot rely solely on imported oil. Countries in the region need to accelerate investments in renewable energy and regional power cooperation to build resilience against future geopolitical disruptions.’
