Oil containers are pictured at the Port of Fujairah, as the war in the Middle East limits marine traffic in the Strait of Hormuz. Photo taken in Fujairah, UAE on May 6, 2026.
Publication Type

Global economic implications of the 2026 Middle East war

Warwick J. McKibbin (PIIE; Australian National University), Marcus Noland (PIIE) and Geoffrey Shuetrim (McKibbin Software Group Pty Ltd.)
Working Paper 26-10
Photo Credit: REUTERS/Amr Alfiky

Key Takeaways

This paper explores two scenarios for the potential economic effects of a Middle East war that causes a spike in energy prices. In the first, oil prices surge for one year to around $120 per barrel, while prices also rise sharply for liquefied natural gas, refined petroleum, and fertilizer: In the second, energy prices remain elevated for three years. We find in both scenarios, relative to our baseline projections:

  • Global growth slows, leaving 2026 GDP lower and inflation higher in most economies, but the economic effects are spread unevenly. Countries more dependent on Middle Eastern oil, natural gas, and fertilizers generally experience the largest declines in GDP and increases in inflation.
  • Emerging economies generally are hit harder than advanced economies because higher fertilizer costs hurt agricultural production, which accounts for a larger share of emerging economies.
  • The US economy is one of the least affected overall: 2026 GDP is around 1.2 percent lower, but certain sectors slow more, particularly transportation, agriculture, and durable manufacturing.
  • China's 2026 GDP is around 1.8 percent lower—despite its large domestic supplies of oil, gas, and fertilizer—as slowing global growth weakens demand for its exports.

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