How small businesses are navigating Syria’s economic recovery

People shop at a shopping mall in the town of Al-Dana, near Sarmada, in the northern Syrian province of Idlib on December 13, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 26 January 2026
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How small businesses are navigating Syria’s economic recovery

  • From home bakeries to online freelancers, microbusinesses are enjoying modest gains after sanctions rollback
  • But for many small enterprises, the promise of recovery still collides with low purchasing power and unreliable services

LONDON: After more than a decade in crisis mode, Syria’s micro, small, and medium-sized enterprises are beginning to shift their gaze from survival to possibility, as the gradual lifting of sanctions following Bashar Assad’s removal in December 2024 sparks cautious economic optimism.

That shift is especially visible among parts of the private sector, which has endured years of shortages, isolation, and a lack of investment over the course of Syria’s grinding, 14-year civil war.

For Amira Saradar, a Damascus-based dentistry student who launched a home-based bakery called Maple in 2021, the change has meant easier access to basic supplies that were once difficult to source.

Before Assad was toppled, sourcing and paying for ingredients for her Western-style desserts — including creme brulee cream puffs, lemon swirl biscuits and tiramisu cookies — was a constant struggle.

“When Maple started, Assad was still president and sanctions hadn’t been lifted, so everything was harder to get,” Saradar told Arab News. “Prices were much higher than they should have been, and the profit margin was very low.” 




Shoppers browse for sweets from a shop at Damascus' Hamidiya covered market on March 29, 2025 as Muslims prepare ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid El-Fitr marking the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AFP)

At times, she turned to suppliers in neighboring Lebanon — a costly workaround that ultimately proved unsustainable. “That was a big reason Maple had to close,” she said.

After shutting down for nearly two years, sanctions relief offered Saradar an opportunity to relaunch.

“I restarted in the summer of 2025, and (my business) truly thrived this time,” she said. She now hopes to expand the business beyond her kitchen and open a shop where she can display and sell her baked creations.

“Everything is easier to find now, and prices are much better,” she said. “Maple can finally be profitable and, hopefully, grow into a very successful online bakery.”

Similar improvements have been felt by microbusinesses in other sectors, though affordability remains a concern for many producers and their customers. 




People shop for fruits at a stall, some of which were not available while deposed president Bashar Al-Assad was in power, like kiwi, mango and pineapple, in the Shalaan Market in the Syrian capital Damascus on May 26, 2025. (AFP)

Lynn Aboul Fadel, an architect who runs a small glass, wood, and fabrics painting business called Leeko Art, said her main challenge remains “the lack of raw materials at prices that match people’s purchasing power.”

Pricing is critical to sustaining demand and growth.

“The products I sell are considered non-essential goods,” Aboul Fadel told Arab News. “Prices need to be reasonable to convince more customers to buy each month, and that is often difficult.”

Those constraints reflect a broader economic reality. Nine out of 10 people in Syria live in poverty, three out of four depend on humanitarian aid, and one in four is jobless, according to a February report by the UN Development Programme.

The poverty rate has nearly tripled from 33 percent before the conflict to about 90 percent today, while extreme poverty has surged sixfold, from 11 percent to 66 percent. 




Kholoud Al-Haw, 63, arranges a display of gold bracelets at her husband's jewelry shop in Daraya, a suburb that lies just southwest of the centre of the capital Damascus on October 29, 2025. (AFP)

“Beyond immediate humanitarian aid, Syria’s recovery requires long-term investment in development to build economic and social stability for its people,” said UNDP Administrator Achim Steiner.

“Restoring productivity for jobs and poverty relief, revitalizing agriculture for food security, and rebuilding infrastructure for essential services such as healthcare, education and energy are key to a self-sustaining future, prosperity, and peace.”

Nevertheless, UNDP estimates Syria’s economy could return to its pre-war size within a decade if robust growth is maintained.

Aboul Fadel shares that guarded optimism. She hopes Leeko Art will benefit as the broader economic outlook improves.

“The lifting of sanctions has greatly raised hopes. It is the beginning of positive change for everyone,” she said. “Improved business conditions overall will certainly help me on an individual level.” 




An aerial view shows a shopping mall in the town of Jableh, northwest of the capital Damascus on December 28, 2024. (AFP)

One immediate benefit, she said, has been access to paid advertising on social media. “My ability to pay social media platforms for marketing is a major factor, and this has been excellent and immediately tangible,” she said.

Since Dec. 8, 2024, when a rebel coalition led by Hayat Tahrir Al-Sham seized control, Western governments have moved to ease or lift several layers of sanctions imposed on the Assad government.

The most significant step came on Dec. 17, 2025, when the US permanently suspended the Caesar Act — the strictest set of measures imposed on the regime in 2019. But the damage from more than 14 years of war and isolation cannot be undone at a stroke.

Syria’s economy has shrunk by roughly two-thirds since 2011, according to World Bank estimates, and rebuilding is projected to cost about $216 billion — nearly 10 times the country’s gross domestic product in 2024. 

INNUMBERS:

• $800bn Estimated GDP loss over 14 years of conflict

• 70% Power plants and transmission lines damaged

(Source: UNDP)

Before the war, MSMEs accounted for about 95 percent of businesses and roughly 60 percent of GDP, according to UNDP. By 2023, their contribution had fallen to about 40 percent, though they still employed roughly 70 percent of the workforce.

One such enterprise is the Damascus-based Syrian International Academy, a vocational training institution specializing in diplomacy, public relations, and media.

It lost many international partners after the war began in 2011. But now, its founder and president, Dr. Nezar Mihoub, sees room for growth.

“As an educational institution focused on training national and Arab cadres, we are now able to restore and expand international cooperation,” Mihoub told Arab News.

He said reduced bureaucracy and renewed Arab engagement, particularly from Saudi Arabia, could play a meaningful role in economic recovery. 




People shop at a shopping mall in the town of Al-Dana, near Sarmada, in the northern Syrian province of Idlib on December 13, 2024. (AFP)

That regional interest is already taking shape. A recent analysis by New Zealand-based Karam Shaar Advisory found that companies from the Gulf are leading the reshaping of Syria’s investment landscape.

Of 40 memorandums of understanding signed during the Syrian-Saudi Investment Forum in July, Saudi Arabia led in number and ranked second by value, with $6.4 billion in preliminary agreements. Additional energy deals followed in August.

But even before that, in May, Saudi Arabia and Qatar jointly paid off Syria’s $15.5 million debt to the World Bank.

“Attracting international financing and support could launch infrastructure reconstruction projects, creating job opportunities and revitalizing the construction and service sectors,” Mihoub said.

“A stable environment would also encourage the return of part of the expatriate Syrian talent and capital. Traditional sectors such as agriculture, industry, and oil could begin to recover as security conditions improve.” 




Shoppers browse for clothing from a shop at Damascus' Hamidiya covered market on March 29, 2025 as Muslims prepare ahead of the Muslim holiday of Eid Al-Fitr marking the end of the holy fasting month of Ramadan. (AFP)

For freelancers and professionals who depend on international connectivity, sanctions relief has brought partial but uneven gains.

Alexandra Hammoud, an independent English-language teacher based in the coastal city of Tartous, said access to previously blocked online platforms has improved — a critical shift for her work.

“I have been able to enhance and develop my skills through enrolling in online courses on various platforms, such as FutureLearn and Coursera,” she told Arab News.

“I am also able to deliver courses in a virtual environment using Google Meet, manage resources on Google Drive and maintain communication with learners via social media platforms.”

Hammoud has also been able to publish educational content online. 

Yet obstacles persist.

“Internet connection is not always stable, which causes disruption while delivering courses and thus having to terminate or postpone (teaching) sessions,” Hammoud said. 




Workers sort out olives at an olive press factory in Maardes, Syria November 28, 2022. (Reuters)

She also noted that some platforms, such as Coursera and Kahoot, still require the use of virtual private networks.

Online payment systems and some business email services remain difficult to access in Syria, especially for international use, she added.

Internet access in Syria remained unstable throughout 2025 due to a combination of infrastructure failures, power shortages and government-ordered shutdowns, including during exam periods and in localized provincial blackouts.

A Cloudflare report for the second quarter of 2025 said some outages stemmed from electricity and infrastructure issues, in addition to deliberate disruptions. 




Syrian scriptwriter Maan Sakbani works at his office in Damascus on November 24, 2025. (AFP)

Similar frustrations are shared by Damascus-based graphic designer Salma Saleh. “Undoubtedly, the lifting of the Caesar Act is a promising development,” she told Arab News. “However, we have yet to feel the impact.”

She said many services, including creative software and payment systems, remain inaccessible without workarounds, while electricity and internet outages continue to disrupt work. 

“To this day, I cannot use Gemini without a VPN, and the same applies to most online services,” she said. “Even Adobe, a company we pay subscription fees to, has not lifted the ban, and so we must use a VPN tool while using Adobe’s creative products.”

Although EU, UK and US sanctions were largely lifted in 2025, Saleh said the practical effects have lagged. 




A worker carries a bag of flour inside a factory in the industrial city in Hassia, Homs, Syria March 19, 2025. (Reuters)

“The lifting of restrictions remains partial and incomplete despite the removal of sanctions,” she said. “The question remains: What are global companies and banks waiting for?”

Power outages in Syria remain severe, with most areas, including the capital, receiving only a few hours of electricity a day, despite limited improvements and new imports.

Years of war have damaged power plants and transmission networks. Even after sanctions relief, financial constraints and underinvestment continue to slow repairs.

Nevertheless, new startups are emerging and global services like Samsung and GitHub are starting to return — even as major platforms and shipping companies, including Amazon and DHL, remain absent.

 


UPDATE 9-Iran foreign minister says progress made in nuclear talks with US in Geneva

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UPDATE 9-Iran foreign minister says progress made in nuclear talks with US in Geneva

* Araqchi says progress made on the main guiding principles
* Iranian media say parts of Strait of Hormuz ‌to be temporarily closed
* The talks involved officials from both Iran and US
* US President Trump said he was involved indirectly

GENEVA: Iran and the United States reached an understanding on Tuesday on main “guiding principles” in talks aimed at resolving their longstanding nuclear dispute, but that does not mean a ​deal is imminent, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi said.
Oil futures fell and the benchmark Brent crude contract tumbled more than 1 percent after Araqchi’s comments, which helped ease fears of conflict in the region, where the US has deployed a battle force to press Tehran for concessions.
“Different ideas have been presented, these ideas have been seriously discussed, ultimately we’ve been able to reach a general agreement on some guiding principles,” Araqchi told Iranian media after the talks concluded in Geneva.

BOTH SIDES HAVE ‘CLEAR NEXT STEPS’
The indirect discussions between US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff and US President Donald Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, alongside Araqchi, were mediated by Oman. The White House did not respond to emailed questions about the meeting.
Oman’s Foreign Minister Badr Al-Busaidi said in a post on X “much work is yet to be done” but Iran and the US were leaving with “clear ‌next steps” .
Just as ‌talks began on Tuesday, Iranian state media said Iran would temporarily shut part of the ​Strait ‌of ⁠Hormuz, a vital ​global ⁠oil supply route, due to “security precautions” while Iran’s elite Revolutionary Guards conducted military drills there.
Tehran has in the past threatened to shut down the strait to commercial shipping if it is attacked, a move that would choke off a fifth of global oil flows and drive up crude prices.
Responding to comments by Trump that “regime change” in Iran might be the best course, the country’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, 86, warned that any US attempts to depose his government would fail.
“The US President says their army is the world’s strongest, but the strongest army in the world can sometimes be slapped so hard it cannot get up,” he said, in comments published by Iranian media.
Speaking at a disarmament conference in Geneva after the talks, Araqchi said ⁠that a “new window of opportunity” had opened and that he hoped discussions would lead to a “sustainable” solution ‌that ensured the full recognition of Iran’s legitimate rights.
Earlier, Trump said he himself would ‌be involved “indirectly” in the Geneva talks and that he believed Tehran wanted to make ​a deal.
“I don’t think they want the consequences of not making ‌a deal,” Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on Monday. “We could have had a deal instead of sending the B-2s in ‌to knock out their nuclear potential. And we had to send the B-2s.”
The US joined Israel last June in bombing Iranian nuclear facilities. The US and Israel believe Iran aspires to build a nuclear weapon that could threaten Israel’s existence. Iran says its nuclear program is purely peaceful, even though it has enriched uranium far beyond the purity needed for power generation, and close to what is required for a bomb.

IRAN SAYS IT WILL ONLY DISCUSS NUCLEAR PROGRAMME
Since those ‌strikes, Iran’s Islamic rulers have been weakened by street protests, suppressed at a cost of thousands of lives, against a cost-of-living crisis driven in part by international sanctions that have strangled Iran’s oil ⁠income.
Washington has sought to expand ⁠the scope of talks to non-nuclear issues such as Iran’s missile stockpile. Tehran says it is willing only to discuss curbs on its nuclear program — in exchange for sanctions relief — and that it will not give up uranium enrichment completely or discuss its missile program.
Khamenei reiterated Iran’s position that its formidable missile stockpile is non-negotiable and missile type and range have nothing to do with the United States.
A senior Iranian official told Reuters on Tuesday the success of the Geneva talks hinged on the US not making unrealistic demands and on its seriousness on lifting the crippling sanctions on Iran.

US B-2 BOMBERS STRUCK NUCLEAR TARGETS
Tehran and Washington were scheduled to hold a sixth round of talks in June last year when Washington’s ally Israel launched a bombing campaign against Iran, and was then joined by US B-2 bombers that struck nuclear targets. Tehran has since said it has halted uranium enrichment activity.
Iran has joined the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which guarantees countries the right to pursue civilian nuclear power in return for requiring them to forgo atomic weapons and cooperate with the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Israel, which has ​not signed the NPT, neither confirms nor denies having nuclear weapons, ​under a decades-old ambiguity policy designed to deter surrounding enemies. Scholars believe it does.