Economy April 17, 2026 01:15 PM

IMF: Middle East Conflict to Widen Economic Gaps Across Latin America and Caribbean

Higher energy prices lift exporters but threaten tourism-dependent islands and energy-importing Central American economies

By Maya Rios
IMF: Middle East Conflict to Widen Economic Gaps Across Latin America and Caribbean

The International Monetary Fund warns that the Middle East war will deepen economic divergence within Latin America and the Caribbean. While oil-producing countries are receiving short-term relief from stronger energy prices, tourism-reliant Caribbean nations and energy-importing Central American states face a deteriorating outlook, with the IMF flagging rising inflation, riskier financing conditions and uneven impacts on households and public finances.

Key Points

  • The IMF says the Middle East war will likely widen economic divergence in Latin America and the Caribbean, with oil producers benefiting in the near term while tourism-dependent Caribbean economies and energy-importing Central America face deterioration.
  • Regional growth is projected at 2.3% in 2026, nearly unchanged from 2.4% in 2025, and expected to rise to 2.7% in 2027; Brazil is forecast to grow 1.9% and Mexico 1.6% this year.
  • Sectors most affected include oil and gas (export revenues and public finances), tourism (Caribbean economies), and energy imports and power systems (Central American economies, with renewables potentially offering partial relief).

The International Monetary Fund said the conflict in the Middle East is poised to exacerbate economic disparities across Latin America and the Caribbean, offering some near-term benefits to oil exporters while worsening conditions for tourism-dependent Caribbean economies and energy-importing countries in Central America.

The warning came in a blog post released alongside the IMF's updated World Economic Outlook, which projects regional growth of 2.3% in 2026 - nearly unchanged from 2.4% in 2025 - and a pickup to 2.7% in 2027. The lender's outlook also included country-level growth forecasts, with Brazil expected to expand 1.9% this year and Mexico 1.6%.

According to the IMF, the region entered 2026 in relatively solid shape, with inflation near target in many economies and growth tracking close to trend. That favorable starting point, however, has been undercut by the conflict, which the IMF characterized as a new external shock. The lender highlighted swings in market sentiment, tighter financing conditions and sharp commodity price movements as channels through which the war is affecting the region.

Commodity markets have been volatile. On Friday, both Brent and WTI crude oil prices fell by more than 10% after Iran's foreign minister said passage for all commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz was open during a ceasefire. Despite that single-day drop, the IMF noted that both benchmarks are up roughly 45% so far in 2026.

The IMF identified oil-producing countries in the region as the clearest short-term beneficiaries. Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela were cited as having gained from higher energy prices, which have increased export revenues, supported public finances and eased pressures on external accounts. The fund cautioned, however, that households in these economies still face higher fuel and food costs.

By contrast, the lender said the most severely affected economies are likely to be Caribbean nations that depend heavily on tourism. The IMF pointed to a combination of high public debt and large energy import bills in those markets, making them particularly vulnerable to another surge in oil prices.

Central America is also exposed to the fallout from pricier energy. The IMF said the region faces a broad negative impact from costlier fuel, although it acknowledged that increased use of renewable energy in some countries could provide partial relief.

More broadly, the IMF warned that the regional story will not be one of growth alone. It expects inflation to rise as higher fuel, transport and food costs filter through to consumers, exerting the greatest pressure on lower-income households. The fund also cautioned that countries heavily reliant on foreign financing could face additional strain as investor risk appetite becomes more guarded.

Specific inflation projections from the IMF show a slight rise in 2026: inflation in the region is expected to increase to 6.6% this year from 6.5% in 2025, before easing to 4.2% in 2027.

In its guidance to policymakers, the IMF urged governments and central banks not to abandon the credibility they established after the post-pandemic inflation surge. It said countries with stronger public finances and clearer policy frameworks will be best positioned to absorb the shock. The fund also warned against broad-based fuel or food subsidies, arguing that any support measures should be narrowly targeted to vulnerable families and businesses.


Context and implications

  • The IMF view underscores a regional split in which energy exporters gain temporary fiscal and external account relief while importers and tourism-heavy economies face mounting pressures.
  • Rising commodity prices and heightened market volatility could translate into tighter financing conditions for countries that depend on external capital.
  • Policymakers are being advised to preserve policy credibility and to focus any support on the most vulnerable, rather than deploying broad subsidies that could weaken public finances.

Risks

  • Higher fuel, transport and food costs are expected to push up inflation, placing the heaviest burden on lower-income households and affecting consumer spending across multiple sectors.
  • Countries dependent on foreign financing may face tighter capital conditions and investor caution, increasing refinancing and debt-servicing risks for sovereigns and corporates.
  • Tourism-dependent Caribbean economies with high debt and large energy import bills are particularly vulnerable to further oil-price spikes, which could deepen fiscal strains and balance of payments pressures.

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