The worldwide economic system is vulnerable to rising at its slowest tempo because the Covid-19 pandemic if battle within the Center East retains oil costs at $100 per barrel for the remainder of this yr, the IMF has warned.
The fund mentioned the global economy would develop by simply 2.5 per cent this yr — the weakest tempo since 2020 — and inflation would soar by 5.4 per cent below an “antagonistic state of affairs” the place petroleum spot costs held round their present degree.
The worth of the worldwide oil benchmark, Brent crude, rose again above $100 per barrel on Monday after talks between the US and Iran fell aside and Washington imposed a naval blockade within the Strait of Hormuz. Costs then misplaced some floor on Tuesday, nonetheless.
Oil costs had been round $70 per barrel earlier than the US and Israel launched strikes on Iran, unleashing a battle that has disrupted shipments by means of the essential waterway.
IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas instructed the FT that developments over the weekend had triggered an increase in oil costs “that may convey us nearer to the antagonistic state of affairs”.
“The failure of the negotiations between Iran and the US, the reciprocal blockade by the US . . . probably makes the scenario worse by way of locking in additional oil contained in the Strait of Hormuz as an alternative of permitting it to stream to the market.”
The IMF’s reference, or baseline, state of affairs — set earlier this month, forward of the failure of ceasefire talks on the weekend — forecast progress of three.1 per cent this yr and inflation of 4.4 per cent. These projections assume the battle will finish shortly and oil costs return to shut to their pre-crisis ranges.
In 2025, the worldwide economic system expanded by 3.5 per cent, whereas costs rose by 4.1 per cent.
With out the battle in Iran, the IMF mentioned it will have upgraded its progress forecasts from the final set of projections in January.
The discharge of the extra detrimental outlook comes as international finance ministers and central financial institution governors journey to Washington for the IMF and World Financial institution spring conferences.
A few of the world’s poorest international locations at the moment are vulnerable to requiring bailouts from the fund and are anticipated to ask it for assist to deal with the affect of the conflict on vitality costs and the price of fertiliser.
“Our estimate is that about half of the rise in fertiliser costs turns into a rise in meals costs 12 months later,” Gourinchas instructed the FT.
Even within the IMF’s reference projections, below which superior economies can be barely affected as a complete, rising markets would take a success to progress of 0.3 share factors. Within the Center East and central Asia, progress in 2026 can be 2 share factors decrease at 1.9 per cent, in contrast with 3.6 per cent final yr.
Below the antagonistic state of affairs, the IMF forecasts an increase in short-term inflation expectations and a tightening in international monetary situations. Oil costs would fall again to $75 per barrel in 2027 on this state of affairs.
The IMF additionally forecast a extra extreme state of affairs, the place the common spot value of petroleum hits $110 per barrel in 2026 and rises additional to $125 the next yr. On this projection, inflation expectations ratchet up and power central banks to lift rates of interest.
Below that extreme state of affairs, progress would fall to 2 per cent this yr, with inflation hovering to five.8 per cent.
“Two per cent progress is one thing we’ve seen solely 4 occasions since 1980, and two of those occasions had been related truly with huge crises, the worldwide monetary disaster and Covid,” Gourinchas mentioned, including that it was “a particularly low progress charge for the worldwide economic system”.
“It’s a progress charge that shall be related to lacking the mark on a variety of goal metrics,” he mentioned. “If you concentrate on the variety of individuals dwelling in poverty, if you concentrate on macroeconomic instability, if you concentrate on meals insecurity — we shall be doing worse throughout all these dimensions.”
In its international monetary stability report, launched on Tuesday, the IMF additionally warned that traders betting on a optimistic final result to the Center East battle had been overlooking vulnerabilities within the monetary system that might be uncovered by a extra extended shock.
Markets have to date absorbed the preliminary affect of the conflict in an “orderly” manner, however “uneven” dangers imply the clash in Iran may nonetheless push the monetary system into disaster, the IMF mentioned.
Tobias Adrian, director of the IMF’s financial and capital markets division, instructed the FT that “markets have been on the optimistic aspect”, including there was a “exceptional” restoration in fairness and debt markets because the short-term ceasefire started.
“There was a really pronounced reversal . . . so in that sense I do suppose there’s a little bit of an optimistic view,” he mentioned.
Fairness traders have shrugged off Trump’s Hormuz blockade, and Wall Avenue’s blue-chip S&P 500 has rebounded to above the place it was buying and selling when the US and Israel first attacked Iran on February 28.
The IMF mentioned: “The present correction appears extra in keeping with a squeeze of lengthy investor positioning than with a swap to brief positioning and will recommend optimism for a comparatively brief period of the battle.
“This in flip factors to uneven dangers from a extra extended shock, together with by means of persistently excessive vitality costs.”
Lots of the IMF’s issues stem from elevated debt ranges within the monetary system — notably borrowing by governments, but additionally leverage in hedge funds and alternate traded funds.
“Higher bond market volatility may tighten funding markets, which has been a locus of previous monetary turmoil,” the IMF mentioned. Elevated issuance of shorter-term debt by governments has “made core sovereign bond markets extra weak to rollover dangers, notably in durations of rising inflation,” it added.
Information visualisation by Ian Hodgson in Washington
