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HomeBusinessEscalating Iran Conflict Puts Global Growth and Inflation Outlook at Risk

Escalating Iran Conflict Puts Global Growth and Inflation Outlook at Risk

Escalating Iran Conflict Puts Global Growth and Inflation Outlook at Risk

A temporary surge in oil prices to $100 per barrel could slow global growth by 0.4 percentage point, Goldman ​Sachs analysts said on Thursday, as a widening conflict ‌in Iran chokes off vital Middle East oil and gas flows.

 

Under its baseline forecast, Goldman expects oil prices to increase a bit ​further before moderating to $76 per barrel on average ​in the first quarter of 2026 and $65 in the ⁠fourth quarter.

 

In an upside scenario, it expects oil ​prices to rise to about $100 per barrel, before normalizing over the course ​of 2026.

 

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Under its baseline forecast, Goldman estimates a “modest” 0.1 pp drag on global GDP growth and a 0.2 pp boost to global ​headline inflation.

 

 

A jump to $100 per barrel could fuel a ​0.7 pp rise in global headline inflation.

 

Central banks have historically not ‌reacted ⁠directly to oil shocks, but tend to tighten policy modestly when inflation is elevated, or price shocks are large, the brokerage said.

 

Global monetary policy outlook will be mostly ​unaffected under the ​baseline forecast.

 

However, ⁠policy could turn more hawkish – potentially through a delay in rate cuts in emerging ​markets – if oil prices hit $100 per barrel ​or if ⁠higher costs pass through to consumer prices at a higher-than-normal rate.

 

Higher oil prices are expected to weigh on real ⁠incomes ​and consumer spending, while oil exporters ​such as Canada and several Latin American economies may benefit.

 

 

 

 

 

Reporting by Akriti ​Shah and Siddarth S in Bengaluru; Editing by Sriraj Kalluvila

This article was first reported by Reuters