Global economic growth is now estimated at 3.0 per cent this year, the International Monetary Fund said, down from 3.1 per cent in its April forecast.

The IMF on Wednesday cut its 2026 growth projection for the world economy again, saying an AI boom has not fully offset the fallout from war in the Middle East.
Global economic growth is now estimated at 3.0 per cent this year, the International Monetary Fund said, down from 3.1 per cent in its April forecast. The estimate was made before fresh exchanges of fire between the United States and Iran in recent hours.
It is the second time this year that the fund has lowered its overall growth expectations. The latest estimate marks a cooling from the 2025 growth rate as well.
Global inflation, meanwhile, is anticipated to accelerate to 4.7 per cent this year, a higher level than earlier projected.
Still, the overall growth slowdown is modest, as momentum in artificial intelligence — driven by demand — partially offsets the effects of the war.
The IMF said it expects global growth to pick up in 2027 to 3.4 per cent.
Deniz Igan, division chief at the IMF’s research department, told AFP that its forecasts are “broadly unchanged” cumulatively for the next two years and described the bounce-back as “a V-shaped recovery.”
The delayed recovery from war on Iran, longer disruptions, and higher prices are part of the reason the world economy will take a bigger hit this year, she added.
The IMF flagged that fallout varies widely.
“Energy exporters outside the conflict zone benefit from favorable terms of trade, whereas economies plugged into the technology-led upturn experience stronger activity even if they are energy importers,” the fund said.
“In contrast, activity weakens for energy importers with limited participation in the technology value chain,” it added.
US-Israeli strikes targeting Iran since February 28 sparked Tehran’s retaliation in virtually blocking off the Strait of Hormuz, while plunging the Middle East into war.
As traffic stalled in the key waterway for energy transit, global oil prices soared — weighing on economies.
Oil and gas shipments resumed as a temporary US-Iran deal paused hostilities, but temperatures are again rising.
Igan — speaking before hostilities resumed, sparked by Iranian attacks on ships in the strait — said she expected the normalization of traffic through the waterway by 2027.
‘Glaring Differences’
Although the world economy has weathered the shock from the war so far better than feared, the IMF warned: “The global picture blurs glaring differences across countries.”
Retail gasoline costs jumped by 30 per cent in emerging Asia after the onset of war, and only by 15 per cent in Latin America.
While the US economy is still set to expand 2.3 per cent this year, growth in the Middle East and central Asia was downgraded by 1.2 percentage points to 0.7 per cent.
The downgrade is “consistent with a longer closure of the Strait of Hormuz,” the IMF said, but it added that it expects a larger rebound in the future.
The euro area is set to grow 0.9 per cent this year, also a downward revision. Growth in France is pegged at 0.6 percent — 0.3 percentage points lower than earlier expected.
The world’s second biggest economy, China, saw its growth projection adjusted upwards slightly to 4.6 per cent.
Yet, the effects of the war have not fully passed through, the IMF said.
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The release of strategic reserves has provided some relief amid reduced energy flows, but there could still be weakness ahead.
The IMF also warned that the possibility of a “renewed Middle East conflict looms large and could extend commodity price volatility, further threaten supply chains, raise prices, and weigh on financial conditions.”
Trade fragmentation could accelerate too, risking higher prices.
Nonetheless, there were some bright spots, the IMF said.
There was a “positive surprise” from some economies key to the global technology supply chain, despite their exposure to disruptions from the war.
The top four net exporters of AI-related hardware — Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand, and Malaysia — saw resilient growth.
Igan added that expectations of higher inflation this year merely mark a pause, “not a break from the disinflation trend.”





