The longest recorded national internet shutdown in a connected society has cost the Iranian economy $2.6 billion, pushing millions toward unemployment and industrial paralysis.
DUBAI: Iran is grappling with a catastrophic economic “silent earthquake” as its wartime internet blackout enters its 73rd day. What began as a strategic move following the escalation of conflict in late February has spiraled into a full-blown digital siege, crippling the private sector, shuttering factories, and leaving millions of workers in a state of professional limbo.
According to internet watchdog NetBlocks, this is the longest national internet shutdown ever recorded in a modern, connected society. The restrictions have moved beyond a mere communication hurdle, becoming a primary driver of a deepening recession that analysts say is rivaling the damage caused by physical airstrikes and international sanctions.
The Digital Toll: Jobs and Capital in Freefall
The scale of the crisis is reflected in stark data. NetBlocks estimates that the blackout has already drained over $2.6 billion from Iran’s economy. The daily loss to the digital sector alone is pegged at approximately $80 million.
The human cost is even more staggering. Iranian officials concede that nearly one million jobs have already been lost, with an additional two million people facing indirect unemployment. The industrial downturn, fueled by disrupted supply chains and damaged petrochemical plants, threatens the livelihoods of up to 3.5 million workers.
The Collapse of ‘Amazon of Iran’ and E-commerce
The once-burgeoning Iranian tech scene is in a state of survival. Digikala, frequently referred to as the “Amazon of Iran,” has been forced to downsize its workforce. Others have not been so lucky; Kamva, a prominent e-commerce platform, announced its complete closure.
“After months of internet shutdown, we could no longer bypass the crisis,” founder Hadi Farnoud stated, highlighting the plight of businesses that saw 80-90% of their marketing channels vanish overnight as access to global platforms like Instagram and WhatsApp remained severed.
Beyond Tech: Industrial Paralysis
The crisis has bled into heavy industry. Strikes on infrastructure have disrupted raw material supplies, while the digital blackout has frozen payment systems and maritime trade coordination. Reports indicate mass layoffs at textile and manufacturing plants across western and northern Iran, with some facilities shedding hundreds of workers in single batches.
“The wave of job cuts and the recession we are seeing is mainly because of the digital siege, not the bombs,” a Tehran-based business owner told Bloomberg, echoing a sentiment that digital isolation is a more potent economic weapon than kinetic warfare.
A Vortex of Economic Despair
The blackout is pushing the population toward state-controlled domestic platforms, which critics argue lack privacy and oversight. Meanwhile, the middle class is selling assets to survive. Stories of professionals selling cars and jewelry to buy basic necessities have become increasingly common in Tehran.
As the US administration signals a “maximum pressure” stance to weaken the Iranian economy, the combination of war damage, runaway inflation, and digital isolation has created what economist Amir Hossein Khaleghi calls an “overwhelming vortex.” With no end to the blackout in sight, the long-term damage to Iran’s private sector may take decades to repair.












































