>>515731028
Nepal is already poor so I don't think things could really get any worse unless you mean no electricity, no water, no internet, mass starvation, etc.
Even then before I left Nepal the conditions were kinda there already, my family could get water on tap at 3:00 to 6:00 in the afternoon, we also did not have any electricity for about 6 to 12 hours everyday, we mostly spent that time playing board games, walking around, talking to family, cooking, farming/gardening, taking care of the dog or playing cards. I do not think starvation will happen since the country should by majority be full of farmers still, though aging.
To be honest I do not think their politicians were helping the country anyways, all of the quality of life improvements Nepal has had so far has mostly been infrastructure, they atleast have water, electricity and actually quite decent cheap and uncensored internet (only because they're just kinda behind everyone else for now). In terms of politics or administrative tasks they've probably had a decent deal with suppliers outside the country to get stuff like Nvidia GPU's and other things that are kind of a luxury but also necessary, but then again things are super global thesedays so the deals were probably not that difficult to pull off.
Also a lot of earnings from Nepalis are from foreign countries because they all go to other countries because even foreign countries minimum wage or less than so (seasonal agricultural work) is better than payment in Nepal. So any economical downfall wont really hurt a good portion of the people since they're not really working there or whatever and pretty much any foreign currency will always translate to big money there.
Around the time I left Nepal was also the time when the Monarchy were killed, since then the infrastructure has been improving so I dont think things will get any worse. Infact, Nepal is so behind a lot of countries that it'd be impressive if things get Haiti mud cookie teir worse.