24 x 7 World News

Risk of a Wider Middle East War Threatens a тАШFragileтАЩ World Economy

0

тАЬAll of these things are happening all at the same time,тАЭ Mr. Gill said. тАЬWe are in one of the most fragile junctures for the world economy.тАЭ

Mr. GillтАЩs assessment echoes those of other analysts. Jamie Dimon, the chief executive of JPMorgan Chase, said last month that тАЬthis may be the most dangerous time the world has seen in decades,тАЭ and described the conflict in Gaza as тАЬthe highest and most important thing for the Western world.тАЭ

The recent economic troubles have been fueled by deepening geopolitical conflicts that span continents. Tensions between the United States and China over technology transfers and security only complicate efforts to work together on other problems like climate change, debt relief or violent regional conflicts.

The overriding political preoccupations also mean that traditional monetary and fiscal tools like adjusting interest rates or government spending may be less effective.

The brutal fighting between Israel and Hamas has already taken the lives of thousands of civilians and inflicted wrenching misery on both sides. If the conflict stays contained, though, the ripple effects on the world economy are likely to remain limited, most analysts agree.

Jerome H. Powell, the Federal Reserve chair, said on Wednesday that тАЬit isnтАЩt clear at this point that the conflict in the Middle East is on track to have significant economic effectsтАЭ on the United States, but he added, тАЬThat doesnтАЩt mean it isnтАЩt incredibly important.тАЭ

Mideast oil producers do not dominate the market the way they did in the 1970s, when Arab nations drastically cut production and imposed an embargo on the United States and some other countries after a coalition led by Egypt and Syria attacked Israel.

At the moment, the United States is the worldтАЩs largest oil producer, and alternative and renewable energy sources make up a bit more of the worldтАЩs energy mix.

тАЬItтАЩs a highly volatile, uncertain, scary situation,тАЭ said Jason Bordoff, director of the Center on Global Energy Policy at Columbia University. But there is тАЬa recognition among most of the parties, the U.S., Europe, Iran, other gulf countries,тАЭ he continued, referring to the Persian Gulf, тАЬthat itтАЩs in no oneтАЩs interest for this conflict to significantly expand beyond Israel and Gaza.тАЭ

Mr. Bordoff added that missteps, poor communication and misunderstandings, however, could push countries to escalate even if they didnтАЩt want to.

And a significant and sustained drop in the global supply of oil тАФ whatever the reasons тАФ could simultaneously slow growth and inflame inflation, a cursed combination known as stagflation.

Leave a Reply