Iran War Weighs on Global Economy as IMF Meeting Starts
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 13, 2026
4 min readLast updated: April 13, 2026
Add as preferred source on GooglePublished by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on April 13, 2026
4 min readLast updated: April 13, 2026
Add as preferred source on GoogleGlobal alarm grows as the Iran war sparks a surge in energy costs and stagflation fears. The IMF and World Bank warn of downgraded growth and higher inflation. Governments from Germany to Nigeria are enacting emergency measures ahead of the IMF spring meetings.
By Mark John
LONDON, April 13 (Reuters) - Alarm over the impact of the Iran war on the global economy grew on Monday with more countries announcing emergency support measures to combat rising energy costs, while others appealed for international support.
The conflict - the third major shock to hit the world's economy after the COVID pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine - will dominate this week's gathering nL1N40U068 of finance officials at the International Monetary Fund in Washington.
Any lingering hopes of an early restart to oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz chokepoint were dashed after the failure nL6N40V09S of U.S.-Iran talks at the weekend that left a fragile ceasefire in yet greater jeopardy.
The IMF and World Bank have already signalled they will downgrade their forecasts for global growth and raise their inflation predictions as a result of the war, with emerging markets and developing countries seen hit hardest.
Nigeria said on Monday it would need greater international support to combat fuel costs at home even as higher crude prices boosted foreign exchange earnings for Africa's top oil producer.
"The shock comes at a critical transition point, intensifying inflationary pressures and raising living costs for households," Finance Minister Wale Edun said in a statement ahead of this week's meetings in Washington.
Local petrol prices have surged more than 50% and diesel more than 70% since the start of the conflict, Edun said, adding that the shock threatened to derail efforts launched in 2023 to stabilise the economy and revive growth.
MORE COUNTRIES SIGNAL SUPPORT AS SHOCK MOUNTS
Few countries are immune to the aftershocks from the halt of energy shipments through the strait since the war began on February 28 and triggered the world's worst ever disruption to supplies. Dozens of governments have already acted with measures aimed at conserving energy or designed to support consumers.
Germany's coalition government, which initially resisted calls to provide support, said on Monday it had agreed fuel price relief for consumers and businesses worth 1.6 billion euros ($1.9 billion) via cuts to levies on diesel and petrol.
"This war is the real cause of the problems we are experiencing in our own country as well," Chancellor Friedrich Merz said at a press conference.
Sweden's government said it would also cut fuel taxes and hike electricity subsidies in a package worth around $825 million.
"It is a signal that we will do whatever it takes to ... dampen the blow to households of what is happening now," Finance Minister Elisabeth Svantesson told reporters.
British finance minister Rachel Reeves is due later this week to set out her approach to helping businesses struggling with high energy prices. In a column for the Sunday Times, she wrote that UK manufacturers had "faced uncompetitive energy prices for too long".
Separately, Prime Minister Keir Starmer referred to conflict around the world as he explained nL8N40W092 his government's plans to realign with the European Union and its large single market, a decade after his country voted in favour of leaving the EU.
"We're in a world where there's massive conflict, great uncertainty, and I strongly believe the UK's best interests are in a stronger, closer relationship with Europe," he told BBC radio.
The Iran war is also upending central bank policy around the world as policymakers try to understand how much it will hit economic growth and heighten inflation - potentially at the same time in what would be an unwelcome bout of "stagflation".
European Central Bank Vice President Luis de Guindos said on Monday any ECB rate rise would depend nL8N40W0XH on how rising crude oil costs affected prices in the wider economy.
Policymakers at the Bank of Japan are also keeping their options open before their rate-setting meeting this month, but with fading chances nL4N40T1P9 for a rate hike once seen as a strong possibility.
(Reporting by Camillus Eboh in Abuja; Simon Johnson in Stockholm; Andreas Rinke, Maria Martinez and Miranda Murray in Berlin; Sam Tabahriti, Alistair Smouth and Elizabeth Piper in London; Jesús Aguado in Madrid; Leika Kihara in Tokyo; Writing by Mark John; Editing by Susan Fenton)
The Iran war is causing energy supply shocks, prompting rising fuel and living costs, and impacting global economic growth and inflation.
Countries like Germany, Sweden, Nigeria, and the UK are providing fuel price relief, cutting taxes, and seeking international support to mitigate energy cost impacts.
Both the IMF and World Bank plan to downgrade global growth forecasts and raise inflation predictions due to the Iran war’s impact.
Finance officials are discussing emergency support, solutions for inflation, and economic consequences of the supply disruptions at the IMF meeting in Washington.
Central banks, including the ECB and Bank of Japan, are re-evaluating rate hikes as they monitor inflation and possible stagflation caused by rising energy costs.
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