2022 Russian Ukrainian War: The war adds to the series of supply shocks that have struck the global economy in recent years. Like seismic waves, its effects will propagate far and wide through commodity markets, trade, and financial linkages. Russia is a major supplier of oil, gas, and metals, and, together with Ukraine, of wheat and corn.
Explained: How 2022 Russian Ukrainian War Will Bring Down Global Growth





New Delhi (ABC Live India): 2022 Russian Ukrainian War: Global economic prospects have been
severely set back, largely because of the 2022 Russian Ukrainian War.
This crisis unfolds even as the global
economy has not yet fully recovered from the pandemic. Even before the war,
inflation in many countries had been rising due to supply-demand imbalances and
policy support during the pandemic, prompting a tightening of monetary policy.
The latest lockdowns in China could cause new bottlenecks in global supply
chains.
In this context, beyond its immediate and
tragic humanitarian impact, the war will slow economic growth and increase
inflation. Overall economic risks have risen sharply, and policy tradeoffs have
become even more challenging.
Compared to IMF's January forecast, IMF has revised its projection
for global growth downwards to 3.6 percent in both 2022 and
2023. This reflects the direct impact of the war on Ukraine and sanctions on
Russia, with both countries projected to experience steep contractions. This
year’s growth outlook for the European Union has been revised downward by 1.1
percentage points due to the indirect effects of the war, making it the second-largest contributor to the overall downward revision.
The war adds to the series of supply shocks that have struck the
global economy in recent years. Like seismic waves, its effects will propagate
far and wide—through commodity markets, trade, and financial linkages. Russia
is a major supplier of oil, gas, and metals, and, together with Ukraine, of
wheat and corn. Reduced supplies of these commodities have driven their prices
up sharply. Commodity importers in Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia, the
Middle East and North Africa, and sub-Saharan Africa are most affected. But the
surge in food and fuel prices will hurt lower-income households globally,
including in the Americas and the rest of Asia.
Eastern Europe and Central Asia have large
direct trade and remittance links with Russia and are expected to suffer. The
displacement of about 5 million Ukrainian people to neighboring countries,
especially Poland, Romania, Moldova and Hungary, adds to economic pressures in
the region.
Pressures amplified
The medium-term outlook is revised downwards
for all groups, except commodity exporters who benefit from the surge in energy
and food prices. Aggregate output for advanced economies will take longer to
recover to its pre-pandemic trend. And the divergence that opened up in 2021
between advanced and emerging market and developing economies is expected to
persist, suggesting some permanent scarring from the pandemic.
Inflation has become a clear and present danger
for many countries. Even prior to the war, it surged on the back of soaring
commodity prices and supply-demand imbalances. Many central banks, such as the
Federal Reserve, had already moved toward tightening monetary policy.
War-related disruptions amplify those pressures. We now project inflation will
remain elevated for much longer. In the United States and some European
countries, it has reached its highest level in more than 40 years, in the
context of tight labor markets.
The risk is rising that inflation expectations drift away from
central bank inflation targets, prompting a more aggressive tightening response
from policymakers. Furthermore, increases in food and fuel prices may also
significantly increase the prospect of social unrest in poorer countries.
Immediately after the invasion, financial
conditions tightened for emerging markets and developing countries. So far,
this repricing has been mostly orderly. Yet, several financial fragility risks
remain, raising the prospect of a sharp tightening of global financial
conditions as well as capital outflows.
On the fiscal side, policy space was already
eroded in many countries by the pandemic. Withdrawal of extraordinary fiscal
support was projected to continue. The surge in commodity prices and the
increase in global interest rates will further reduce fiscal space, especially
for oil- and food-importing emerging markets and developing economies.
The war also increases the risk of a more
permanent fragmentation of the world economy into geopolitical blocks with
distinct technology standards, cross-border payment systems, and reserve
currencies. Such a tectonic shift would cause long-run efficiency losses, increase
volatility and represent a major challenge to the rules-based framework that
has governed international and economic relations for the last 75 years.
Policy priorities
Uncertainty around these projections is
considerable, well beyond the usual range. Growth could slow down further while
inflation could exceed our projections if, for instance, sanctions extend to
Russian energy exports. The continued spread of the virus could give rise to more
lethal variants that escape vaccines, prompting new lockdowns and production
disruptions.
In this difficult environment, national-level
policies and multilateral efforts will play an important role. Central banks
will need to adjust their policies decisively to ensure that medium- and
long-term inflation expectations remain anchored. Clear communication and
forward guidance on the outlook for monetary policy will be essential to
minimize the risk of disruptive adjustments.
Several economies will need to consolidate
their fiscal balances. This should not impede governments from providing
well-targeted support for vulnerable populations, especially in light of high
energy and food prices. Embedding such efforts in a medium-term framework with
a clear, credible path for stabilizing public debt can help create room to
deliver the needed support.
Even as policymakers focus on cushioning the
impact of the war and the pandemic, other goals will require their attention.
The most immediate priority is to end the
war.
On climate, we must close the gap between
stated ambitions and policy actions. An international carbon price floor
differentiated by country income levels would provide a way to coordinate
national efforts aimed at reducing the risks of catastrophic climate events.
Equally important is the need to secure equitable worldwide access to the full
complement of COVID-19 tools to contain the virus, and to address other global
health priorities. Multilateral cooperation remains essential to advance these
goals.
Policymakers should also ensure that the
global financial safety net operates effectively. For some countries, this
means securing adequate liquidity support to tide over short-term refinancing
difficulties. But for others, comprehensive sovereign debt restructuring will
be required. The Group of Twenty’s Common
Framework for Debt Treatments offers guidance for such restructuring
but has yet to deliver. The absence of an effective and expeditious framework
is a fault line in the global financial system.
Particular attention should also be paid to
the overall stability of the global economic order to make sure that the
multilateral framework that has lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty is
not dismantled.
These risks and policies interact in complex
ways over varying timeframes. Rising interest rates and the need to protect
vulnerable populations against high food and energy prices make it more
difficult to maintain fiscal sustainability. In turn, the erosion of fiscal space
makes it harder to invest in the climate transition, while delays in dealing
with the climate crisis make economies more vulnerable to commodity price
shocks, which feeds into inflation and economic instability. Geopolitical
fragmentation worsens all these trade-offs, increasing the risk of conflict and
economic volatility and decreasing overall efficiency.
In a matter of a few weeks, the world has yet again experienced a major shock. Just as a durable recovery from the pandemic was in sight, war broke out, potentially erasing recent gains. The many challenges we face call for commensurate and concerted policy actions at the national and multilateral levels to prevent even worse outcomes and improve economic prospects for all.
Source: IMF Blog authored by Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas
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