19 May 2026 By Ko Myo
YANGON, Myanmar — Approximately 12.5 million people in Myanmar—or one in four of the population—are currently facing severe hunger, according to the latest report by the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP).
The UN agency highlighted that staple food prices have surged by an average of 18% nationwide. However, the economic strain is significantly more acute in conflict-affected regions under military blockades. Food prices have skyrocketed by 38% in Magway Region, 32% in Kayin State, and 31% in Rakhine State, making basic sustenance unaffordable for millions.
The crisis is heavily felt even in commercial hubs. “Prices are increasing practically every week,” a housewife living on Station Road in Yangon’s Hline Township told MPA. “Every mother and homemaker is now terrified of going to the morning market. If it’s this bad in Yangon, it must be a nightmare in the frontline towns. The tragic reality in Myanmar is that once prices go up, they never come down.”
In resistance strongholds, the situation is compounded by a deliberate military strategy to cut off trading routes, meaning that even those with money often find market shelves completely bare.
“Civilians in liberated zones are bearing the absolute brunt of this artificial inflation,” a Monywa-based activist stated. “To make matters worse, despite the grand statements made in international forums, virtually no international aid agency is able to deliver real, physical assistance to the people on the ground here.”
The WFP emphasized that humanitarian needs are escalating exponentially across the country. Alongside chronic food insecurity, intensified clashes and military scorched-earth operations have forced approximately 3.7 million people to flee their homes, creating a massive, unstable population of internally displaced persons (IDPs) living in makeshift jungle camps.
With the junta tightening its economic chokehold on regions west of the Irrawaddy River and across ethnic states, independent observers warn that Myanmar is rapidly transitioning from a political crisis into a full-scale famine. As international aid systems remain largely blocked by regime bureaucracy, millions of citizens are left with no choice but to ration their remaining food to survive.





