The Middle East war dealt a fresh blow to the global economy on Thursday as the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) slashed its eurozone growth forecast and warned that surging energy prices threaten businesses, consumers, and food production alike.
In its latest economic outlook, the Paris-based body cut its growth projection for the 20-nation eurozone by 0.4 percentage points to just 0.8 percent for 2026—a figure that analysts say reflects not merely caution, but a genuine reckoning with the mounting cost of geopolitical instability.
The bloc’s two largest economies, Germany and France, each saw their individual forecasts trimmed by 0.2 percentage points to 0.8 per cent, underscoring the breadth of the slowdown across the continent.
For Europe, the timing could hardly be worse. The eurozone had been cautiously clawing its way back from years of sluggish post-pandemic growth, buoyed by strong investment in technology and the carry-over momentum from a more promising 2025. Those tailwinds, however, are now being aggressively countered by energy market turbulence triggered by the escalating conflict in the Middle East.
“The energy price surge and the unpredictable nature of the evolving conflict in the Middle East will raise costs and lower demand, offsetting the tailwinds from strong technology-related investment and production, lower effective tariff rates, and the momentum carried over from 2025,” the OECD stated plainly in its report.
Alongside the growth downgrade, the organization raised its inflation forecast for the eurozone by a significant 0.7 percentage points to 2.6 percent—a development that will unsettle policymakers at the European Central Bank, who have spent the better part of three years attempting to tame price pressures without choking off growth entirely.
Higher inflation at this juncture, driven not by domestic demand but by external energy shocks, presents a particularly uncomfortable dilemma: raise interest rates and risk stifling an already fragile recovery, or hold firm and allow inflation to erode purchasing power further.
Perhaps the most alarming detail buried within the OECD’s report concerns not energy grids or manufacturing output but the agricultural sector—and what the war’s price shock could mean for the world’s food supply in the years ahead.
The organization singled out the price of urea, one of the primary nitrogen-based fertilizers used in farming worldwide, which has surged by more than 40 per cent since mid-February.
Fertilizer prices are acutely sensitive to energy costs, as natural gas is a key input in their production, and the current trajectory points to potentially severe consequences for crop yields as early as 2027.
For a world already contending with food security concerns across vulnerable regions, the prospect of reduced harvests adds a humanitarian dimension to what might otherwise appear to be a dry exercise in macroeconomic forecasting.
The OECD was careful to note just how starkly the war has altered the global outlook. Before hostilities escalated, the global economy had been holding up “well” by the organization’s own assessment.
The global growth forecast for 2026 remains unchanged at 2.9 percent—but the OECD made clear that figure obscures a painful counterfactual: without the conflict, global growth could have been 0.3 percentage points higher.
That gap, seemingly modest in percentage terms, translates to hundreds of billions of dollars in lost economic output and represents millions of jobs, business investments, and livelihoods that will not materialize.
The report does offer one note of cautious optimism, assuming that energy disruptions will begin to ease from mid-2026 onwards. But the OECD was quick to temper expectations. “The breadth and duration of the conflict are very uncertain,” it warned, “but a prolonged period of higher energy prices will add markedly to business costs and raise consumer price inflation, with adverse consequences for growth.” In other words, the baseline scenario depends heavily on a de-escalation that is by no means guaranteed.
Not all regions are feeling the pinch equally. The United States, heading into politically charged midterm elections in November, appears better positioned to weather the storm—at least for now.
Following growth of 2.1 percent in 2025, the OECD has actually raised its US growth forecast by 0.3 percentage points to 2 percent for 2026—a notable upward revision at a time when most of its peers are being marked down.
Robust investment in artificial intelligence infrastructure and related industries has provided the American economy with a degree of insulation that European counterparts currently lack.
However, the outlook dims further out. US growth is projected to slow to 1.7 percent in 2027, down 0.2 points from the OECD’s previous estimate, as the momentum from AI investment gradually fades and is overtaken by a deceleration in real income growth and consumer spending. The message is clear: America’s advantage is real, but it is not indefinite.
China, meanwhile, is expected to post growth of 4.4 per cent this year, easing slightly to 4.3 per cent in 2027. While those figures would be the envy of most Western economies, they represent a continued moderation for the world’s second-largest economy.
The OECD attributes the gradual slowdown to the withdrawal of public consumption subsidies, rising energy import costs — itself a consequence of the Middle East turmoil — and the drawn-out adjustment of a property sector that has weighed on confidence and investment for several years.
In the face of these compounding challenges, the OECD’s policy prescriptions are pointed. On the energy front, it called on governments to pursue “policies that improve domestic energy efficiency and lower reliance on imported fossil fuels”—a recommendation that doubles as both an economic survival strategy and a long-term structural imperative.
On trade, the organization urged nations to pursue “agreements to ease trade tensions and deepen trade relations,” arguing that greater policy certainty would strengthen the conditions for sustainable growth—a pointed nudge at a moment when geopolitical fractures are tempting governments toward protectionism.
The overarching message from Thursday’s report is one that policymakers on both sides of the Atlantic will struggle to ignore: the Middle East war is no longer merely a regional crisis.
Its effects—measured in energy invoices, grocery bills, fertilizer prices, and foregone growth—are being felt in every corner of the global economy, and the longer the conflict endures, the steeper the bill will become.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
The Middle East war is no longer a distant regional crisis; it is actively reshaping the global economy. Rising energy prices triggered by the conflict are forcing the OECD to downgrade eurozone growth, push inflation higher, and warn of potential food shortages by 2027 due to surging fertilizer costs.
While the United States holds up relatively well on the back of AI-driven investment, Europe bears the heaviest burden.
The core takeaway is simple: geopolitical instability has a direct price tag, and right now, ordinary consumers, businesses, and farmers worldwide are the ones footing the bill. Until the conflict eases, the economic headwinds will only intensify.























