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The economics of peace: Stability pays

17 April 2026
in Business, Environment, OPINION/COMMENTARY, Politics
2 min. read
Kari Grenade
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by Kari Grenade, PhD, Caribbean Economist and Macroeconomic Advisor

Wars exact a heavy toll, claiming lives, demolishing infrastructure, and triggering humanitarian emergencies that strain entire nations. The economic cost is immense, too.

The United Nations estimates that conflict drains roughly 13% of world GDP. And the damage goes beyond what bombs destroy. Investor confidence collapses, trade routes fracture, and public spending is diverted from development to defence. Wars and instability erode human capital and markets, and rebuilding can take decades if it happens at all.

Peace, by contrast, generates a measurable “peace dividend.” When a country protects stability, growth accelerates, tourism expands, and businesses invest in productivity instead of protection. Predictability attracts long-term capital. It also gives governments room to shift spending from the battlefield to education, health, infrastructure, technology, and climate resilience. Where institutions are strong, social cohesion deepens and macroeconomic stability hold, returns are generated that compound across generations.

The Caribbean offers a clear example. After periods of turbulence in the 1970s and 1980s, steady democratic governance and regional cooperation helped create conditions for economic development. Over time, peace and stability became the region’s most valuable export: a reputation for predictability that attracts visitors, investors, and opportunities. Peace is not simply the absence of war; it is the presence of opportunity, an environment where firms can plan, talent stays, and communities build. For small island states, peace is both shield and engine; it protects hard-won progress and powers sustainable development.

Sustaining peace and stability demands deliberate policies, trust, and strong institutions. Governments can promote stability by investing in sustainable development, strengthening justice systems, and ensuring police accountability. A free press and active citizen participation are vital for keeping societies open and responsive. Inclusive governance that avoids divisive partisan politics builds unity and trust. Expanding opportunities, especially for young people, through quality education, skills training, and decent jobs, reduces the lure of violence and crime. And because today’s threats cross borders, international and regional cooperation on security is essential to keep communities safe and economies thriving.

In a world defined by uncertainty, one thing is clear: instability destroys value, while peace creates it. When economies are tightly linked through global supply chains, conflict hits everyone’s wallet — prices rise, jobs disappear, and essential goods become harder to find. Today’s geopolitical tensions are a reminder of how quickly those effects spread.

The economics of peace reminds us that stability is not a luxury; it is an asset. Shared prosperity is one of the strongest foundations for lasting stability. For any nation seeking durable progress, peace is an investment with the broadest and most reliable returns.

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Tags: conflictkari grenadepeaceunited nations

Comments 1

  1. IVAN FRANCIS says:
    2 months ago

    I love this article. So simply put. There is absolutely no replacement for peace.
    Thank you.
    Keep writing, sister.

    Reply

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