Risk of a Wider Middle East War Threatens a
‘Fragile’ World Economy
After shocks from the pandemic and Russia’s invasion
of Ukraine, there’s little cushion if the fighting between Hamas and Israel
becomes a regional conflict.
Patricia
Cohen
By Patricia
Cohen
Nov. 1,
2023
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/01/business/economy/israel-gaza-war-global-economy.html
Fears that
Israel’s expanding military operations in Gaza could escalate into a regional
conflict are clouding the global economy’s outlook, threatening to dampen
growth and reignite a rise in energy and food prices.
Rich and
poor nations were just beginning to catch their breath after a three-year
string of economic shocks that included the Covid-19 pandemic and Russia’s
invasion of Ukraine. Stinging inflation has been dropping, oil prices have
stabilized and predicted recessions have been avoided.
Now, some
leading international financial institutions and private investors warn that
the fragile recovery could turn bad.
“This is
the first time that we’ve had two energy shocks at the same time,” said
Indermit Gill, chief economist at the World Bank, referring to the impact of
the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East on oil and gas prices.
Those price
increases not only chip away at the buying power of families and companies but
also push up the cost of food production, adding to high levels of food
insecurity, particularly in developing countries like Egypt, Pakistan and Sri
Lanka.
As it is,
nations are already struggling with unusually high levels of debt, limp private
investment and the slowest recovery in trade in five decades, making it tougher
for them to grow their way out of the crisis. Higher interest rates, the result
of central bank efforts to tame inflation, have made it more difficult for
governments and private companies to get access to credit and stave off
default.
Israeli
soldiers surveying destruction in Kfar Azza, a community near the Gaza border
that Hamas militants raided last month.Credit...Tamir Kalifa for The New York
Times
“All of
these things are happening all at the same time,” Mr. Gill said. “We are in one
of the most fragile junctures for the world economy.”
Mr. Gill’s
assessment echoes those of other analysts. Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of
JPMorgan Chase, said last month that “this may be the most dangerous time the
world has seen in decades,” and described the conflict in Gaza as “the highest
and most important thing for the Western world.”
The recent
economic troubles have been fueled by deepening geopolitical conflicts that
span continents. Tensions between the United States and China over technology
transfers and security only complicate efforts to work together on other
problems like climate change, debt relief or violent regional conflicts.
The
overriding political preoccupations also mean that traditional monetary and
fiscal tools like adjusting interest rates or government spending may be less
effective.
The brutal
fighting between Israel and Hamas has already taken the lives of thousands of
civilians and inflicted wrenching misery on both sides. If the conflict stays
contained, though, the ripple effects on the world economy are likely to remain
limited, most analysts agree.
Jerome H.
Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, said on Wednesday that “it isn’t clear at
this point that the conflict in the Middle East is on track to have significant
economic effects” on the United States, but he added, “That doesn’t mean it
isn’t incredibly important.”
Mideast oil
producers do not dominate the market the way they did in the 1970s, when Arab
nations drastically cut production and imposed an embargo on the United States
and some other countries after a coalition led by Egypt and Syria attacked
Israel.
At the
moment, the United States is the world’s largest oil producer, and alternative
and renewable energy sources make up a bit more of the world’s energy mix.
“It’s a
highly volatile, uncertain, scary situation,” said Jason Bordoff, director of
the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University. But there is “a
recognition among most of the parties, the U.S., Europe, Iran, other gulf
countries,” he continued, referring to the Persian Gulf, “that it’s in no one’s
interest for this conflict to significantly expand beyond Israel and Gaza.”
Mr. Bordoff
added that missteps, poor communication and misunderstandings, however, could
push countries to escalate even if they didn’t want to.
And a
significant and sustained drop in the global supply of oil — whatever the
reasons — could simultaneously slow growth and inflame inflation, a cursed
combination known as stagflation.
Gregory
Daco, chief economist at EY-Parthenon, said a worst-case scenario in which the
war broadened could cause oil prices to spike to $150 a barrel, from about $85
currently. “The global economic consequences of this scenario are severe,” he
warned, citing a mild recession, a plunge in stock prices and a loss of $2
trillion for the global economy.
The
prevailing mood now is uncertainty, which is weighing on investment decisions
and could discourage businesses from expanding into emerging markets. Borrowing
costs have soared, and companies in several countries, from Brazil to China,
are expected to have trouble refinancing their debt.
At the same
time, emerging markets like Egypt, Nigeria and Hungary have experienced some of
the worst scarring from the pandemic, according to Oxford Economics, a
consulting firm, resulting in lower growth than had been projected.
Conflict in
the Middle East as well as economic strains could also increase the stream of
migrants heading to Europe from that region and North Africa. The European
Union, which is teetering on the brink of a recession, is in the middle of
negotiations with Egypt over increasing financial aid and controlling
migration.
China,
which gets half its oil imports from the Persian Gulf, is struggling with a
collapse in the real estate market and its weakest growth in nearly three
decades.
By
contrast, the United States has confounded forecasters with its strong growth.
From July through September, the economy grew at an annual rate of just a shade
under 5 percent, buoyed by slowing inflation, stockpiled savings and robust
hiring.
India,
backed by enthusiastic consumers, is on track to perform well next, with
estimated growth of 6.3 percent.
A natural
gas pipeline terminal in Ashkelon, Israel, in 2017. When it comes to energy
markets, events in the Middle East “will not stay in the Middle East,” said M.
Ayhan Kose, a World Bank economist.Credit...Tamir Kalifa for The New York Times
The region
with the gloomiest prospects is sub-Saharan Africa, where, even before fighting
broke out in Israel and Gaza, total output this year was estimated to fall 3.3
percent. Incomes in the region have not increased since 2014, when oil prices
crashed, said M. Ayhan Kose, who oversees the World Bank’s annual Global
Economic Prospects report.
“Sub-Saharan
Africa has already experienced a lost decade,” Mr. Kose said in an interview.
Now “think about another lost decade.”
As far as
energy markets are concerned, something that “happens in the Middle East will
not stay in the Middle East,” he added. “It will have global implications.”
Patricia
Cohen is the global economics correspondent based in London. Since joining The
Times in 1997, she has also written about theater, books and ideas. She is the
author of “In Our Prime: The Fascinating History and Promising Future of Middle
Age.” More about Patricia Cohen
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