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Axios
Axios

The massive economic impact of the global energy crisis

Even if the Iran war ended now and the Strait of Hormuz reopened, the crisis has lasted long enough to bring a meaningful and damaging toll worldwide.

Why it matters: "What began as a disruption in a key energy corridor is now feeding through the entire global economy," the UN's trade and development arm said in an analysis.


Driving the news: Fresh outlooks are landing that take stock of the war's effect.

  • The UN expects global economic growth to slow from 2.9% in 2025 to 2.6% this year, and that's without further escalation.
  • It's not just about energy. Goods needed for fertilizers and much more transit the region — only right now, they don't.

Threat level: Developing nations are hardest hit, though Europe is also reliant in the Strait, and the U.S. is tethered to global oil markets.

  • With higher prices and messed-up supply chains, the UN sees the growth in global merchandise trade slowing from 4.7% last year to 1.5%-2.5% in 2026.

"As uncertainty rises, investors are shifting away from riskier assets, selling stocks, bonds and currencies in developing countries," it finds.

  • Borrowing costs have already risen in Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, developing Asian nations, the UK and elsewhere.

Zoom out: "In some regions, the effects are already acute. Southeast Asia faces fuel shortages and rationing that threaten industrial activity," Atlantic Council analysts said in a weekend post.

Zoom in: The International Energy Agency has started publishing a country-by-country look at emergency measures.

  • A small snapshot: Bangladesh is rationing fuel, limiting air-conditioning levels (something multiple other nations are doing) and closing universities.
  • India is capping industrial gas use; the Philippines declared a national energy emergency; Korea is asking car owners to avoid driving one day per week.
  • Meanwhile, many nations are cutting fuel taxes and boosting subsidies, which can strain budgets.

What's next: More U.S. and global data points.

  • The Labor Department will release U.S. inflation data for March on Friday — the first Consumer Price Index that will capture some of the war's effect.
  • The Energy Department drops revised oil and fuel price outlooks tomorrow.
  • International Monetary Fund head Kristalina Georgieva will give a speech Thursday on the global economic outlook, with the fund publishing detailed analyses the following week.
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