Economy April 10, 2026 03:02 PM

World Bank Chief Warns Middle East Conflict Will Weigh on Global Growth and Lift Inflation

Ajay Banga outlines baseline and downside scenarios as commodity and travel disruptions ripple across markets

By Sofia Navarro
World Bank Chief Warns Middle East Conflict Will Weigh on Global Growth and Lift Inflation

World Bank President Ajay Banga warned that the ongoing war in the Middle East will have cascading effects on the global economy. In a recent interview, he laid out a baseline in which global growth is trimmed modestly if an early end to hostilities occurs, and a much deeper hit if the conflict endures. Banga also highlighted significant upside risks to inflation and said the Bank is already engaging with vulnerable developing economies on crisis funding.

Key Points

  • World Bank President Ajay Banga warned the Middle East war will have cascading global economic effects, with greater damage if the conflict endures.
  • Baseline scenario: global growth could be reduced by 0.3 to 0.4 percentage point; prolonged conflict could cut growth by up to 1 percentage point.
  • Inflation could rise by 200 to 300 basis points in the baseline case, with a larger increase of up to 0.9 percentage point if the war continues; energy, commodities, tourism, and air travel are among the hardest-hit sectors.

World Bank President Ajay Banga said the war in the Middle East is already generating cascading effects on the global economy and that the damage will deepen considerably if fighting continues rather than ending soon. Speaking in an interview on Friday, Banga described a range of scenarios for growth and inflation depending on whether the fragile ceasefire now in place holds.

Under a baseline scenario, in which the current fragile ceasefire announced by U.S. President Donald Trump takes hold and leads to an early end to the conflict, global growth could be lowered by 0.3 to 0.4 percentage point, Banga said. If the conflict persists, that reduction in growth could be as much as 1 percentage point, he added.

Banga also quantified potential impacts on inflation. He said inflation could rise by 200 to 300 basis points in the baseline case. If the war endures and disruptions intensify, the inflationary impact could be greater - up to 0.9 percentage point, according to his remarks.

"The question really is, does this current peace and the negotiations that are going to be happening this weekend - will this lead to a lasting peace and then a reopening of the Strait (of Hormuz)?" Banga asked. "If it doesn’t lead to that, and if conflict were to break out again, would that have an even larger impact, or longer-term impact on energy infrastructure?"

On the ground, the war has caused thousands of deaths across the Middle East and has lifted the price of oil by roughly 50 percent while disrupting supplies of oil, gas, fertilizer, helium and other goods. Tourism and air travel have also been affected by the conflict, compounding the economic fallout.

The two-week ceasefire announced by the U.S. president appears tenuous, with strikes by Israel and Iran reported to have continued. Iran said on Friday that blocked Iranian assets must be released and that a ceasefire must take hold in Lebanon before scheduled talks between the United States and Iran in Pakistan can proceed. President Trump said U.S. warships were being reloaded with ammunition in case those talks were not successful.

Recognizing the strain on vulnerable economies, Banga said the World Bank is already in discussions with several developing countries, including small island states with no natural energy resources, about accessing funds from existing programs under so-called "crisis response windows." These engagements aim to provide immediate financial support to countries facing acute energy and supply shocks.


Sectors affected: energy, commodities, agriculture (fertilizer), tourism, air travel, small island and energy-importing developing economies.

Risks

  • Ceasefire failure or renewed conflict could further disrupt energy infrastructure and shipping lanes such as the Strait of Hormuz, worsening energy market volatility and impacting the energy sector.
  • Sustained disruptions to oil, gas, fertilizer, helium and other goods could push inflation higher, affecting commodity and agricultural markets and increasing costs for importing economies.
  • Tourism and air travel remain vulnerable to continued hostilities and regional strikes, creating additional economic strain on service sectors and countries reliant on travel-related revenues.

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