The world's top economic institutions see a resilient global economy, but the Strait of Hormuz closure and stalled ceasefire threaten to deepen the damage.
The world's top economic institutions see a resilient global economy, but the Strait of Hormuz closure and stalled ceasefire threaten to deepen the damage.

The world's top economic institutions see a resilient global economy, but the Strait of Hormuz closure and stalled ceasefire threaten to deepen the damage.
The global economy has shown unexpected resilience to the Middle East war's shockwaves, the IMF, IEA, World Bank and WTO said Wednesday, even as the IMF cut its 2026 growth forecast to 3 percent — down from 3.5 percent last year.
"The world economy has weathered the shock from the war better than feared," Petya Koeva Brooks, deputy director of the IMF's research department, said in a briefing.
The IMF now sees global growth at 3 percent in 2026, below the 3.1 percent it forecast in April and down from 3.5 percent in 2025, with a rebound to 3.4 percent expected next year. Oil prices are projected to rise nearly 32 percent this year after Iran shut the Strait of Hormuz on Feb. 28, choking off a waterway that carries about a fifth of the world's crude and LNG. Global consumer prices are expected to increase 4.7 percent in 2026, up from 4.1 percent in 2025, stalling two years of disinflation progress.
The four institutions — meeting regularly to assess the war's fallout — called for further progress on resolving the conflict and reopening the strait, warning that the disruption is fueling deeper concerns about economic growth and price stability. The IMF's forecasts assume the strait reopens later this month, even as President Donald Trump declared Wednesday that the 60-day ceasefire with Iran was effectively over.
The U.S. economy — the world's largest — is forecast to grow 2.3 percent in 2026, up from 2.1 percent in 2025 and unchanged from the IMF's April projection, insulated by domestic energy production, AI investment and the boost from Trump's 2025 tax cuts. The 21 European countries sharing the euro face a sharper slowdown, with growth of just 0.9 percent this year, down from 1.4 percent in 2025, as higher energy prices hit harder.
China, the No. 2 economy, is expected to expand 4.6 percent in 2026, down from 5 percent in 2025 but slightly above the IMF's April forecast, as public works spending and high-tech manufacturing exports offset higher energy costs and a property market collapse. India remains the world's fastest-growing major economy at 6.4 percent, though that's down from 7.7 percent last year.
The Strait of Hormuz remains the central risk. The fragile U.S.-Iran Memorandum of Understanding signed June 17 — which secured a 60-day reopening of the waterway — appeared close to collapse Wednesday as the two sides exchanged fresh strikes. Trump told reporters at the NATO summit in Ankara that "to me, I think it's over," and later said further strikes were imminent.
Even if the agreement holds, the recovery faces formidable obstacles. An estimated 80 sea mines remain in the strait's main navigation areas, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. Iran has struck multiple commercial vessels in recent weeks for attempting to transit without complying with its protocols. The IMF's baseline assumes commerce through the strait returns to normal by March 2027, but CFR experts warn that transit fees, infrastructure damage and deep regional mistrust could delay a genuine recovery.
The war has already caused an estimated $58 billion in damages to oil facilities across the Gulf, and repairs to QatarEnergy's Ras Laffan LNG complex — which supplies 5 percent of the world's natural gas — could take up to five years. The humanitarian toll is mounting: 45 million additional people are now facing acute food insecurity because of the war's cascading effects on food and fuel prices, according to the World Food Program.
The last time a major energy chokepoint was disrupted for this long — Iraq's 1990 invasion of Kuwait — oil prices doubled and the global economy entered recession within 12 months. The current resilience, by contrast, reflects the ability of oil-exporting countries outside the Persian Gulf to step up production and the drawdown of existing stockpiles.
For markets, the key question is whether the ceasefire holds. If it collapses and the strait closes again, oil prices could spike well beyond the IMF's 32 percent projection, reigniting inflation and forcing central banks to delay or reverse rate cuts. The IMF's 3 percent growth forecast — already the weakest since the pandemic-era 2020 contraction — would face further downgrades. If the ceasefire holds and traffic normalizes, the rebound to 3.4 percent in 2027 could prove conservative.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.