The International Monetary Fund lowered its 2026 global growth forecast by 10 basis points to 3%, citing elevated commodity prices from the Middle East conflict as the primary drag on the world economy.
The IMF released its quarterly World Economic Outlook update on Wednesday, projecting global output will slow from 3.5% in 2024-2025 as higher energy costs and supply disruptions weigh on activity. The downgrade assumes the Strait of Hormuz begins reopening in mid-July and conditions return to prewar levels by March 2027 — a scenario already under pressure after President Donald Trump tore up the ceasefire with Iran and ordered strikes on more than 80 Iranian military targets.
"The most imminent risk to the baseline forecast stems from developments in the Middle East," the IMF said. "Renewed conflict would propagate through a further increase in commodity prices and extended volatility, supply shortages, and exchange rate pressures."
Energy prices remain about 25% above prewar levels, the multilateral lender said, with India's crude oil basket having surged 66% to $114.48 a barrel in April before cooling to $68.62 so far in July. The muted pass-through to headline inflation so far owes to the release of inventories, which the IMF warned are approaching multiyear lows and "could reach stress levels should supply disruptions persist or hoarding gather steam."
Global consumer prices are now expected to rise 4.7% in 2026, 30 basis points above the April forecast, and 3.9% in 2027, up from a prior estimate of 3.7%.
Growth Diverges Across Regions
India remains among the fastest-growing major economies, with the IMF projecting GDP growth of 6.4% for the fiscal year ending March 2027, a 10-basis-point trim from its April forecast and below the Reserve Bank of India's 6.6% estimate. The agency raised its 2027-28 forecast by 20 basis points to 6.7%, citing momentum in private consumption and services activity.
China received a 20-basis-point upgrade to 4.6% for 2026 and a 10-basis-point bump to 4.1% for 2027, while Brazil's 2026 forecast was raised half a percentage point to 2.4%.
The divergence is starkest in the Middle East. Saudi Arabia's economy is now seen expanding 1.7% in 2026, down from the IMF's April forecast of 3.1%. Iraq, Kuwait and Qatar — commodity producers most exposed to disruptions in energy output and transport — are projected to experience sharp contractions in 2026 followed by double-digit rebounds in 2027. Iran's economy is expected to shrink 5.4% in its current fiscal year.
AI Boom Partly Offsets the War Shock
The world economy has weathered the conflict "better than feared," the IMF said, with the hit from higher energy prices partly offset by accelerated demand in the global technology cycle driven by advances in artificial intelligence. The top four net exporters of AI-related hardware — Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand and Malaysia — posted an average seasonally adjusted annualized growth surprise of 4.4 percentage points in the first three months of 2026, compared with a negative 0.3 percentage point surprise for the rest of the world.
Still, the IMF cautioned that the "AI hype" and exuberant financial markets could "sow the seeds of macrofinancial instability."
The next scheduled update to the World Economic Outlook will be released in October.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.