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Seven weeks of war in West Asia and a recent ceasefire have not erased mounting economic damage, raising renewed fears of global stagflation, analysts and policymakers warned on April 19, 2026.
Early April purchasing managers’ indexes (PMIs) and other business surveys due later this week — with key readings from Germany, France, the euro zone and the UK expected to weaken and US indicators seen broadly steady — will be watched for signs growth and inflation are both deteriorating.
The IMF cautioned officials the shock could tip the world toward a near-recession even if hostilities subside, and S&P Global’s Chris Williamson flagged the stagflation risk.
Energy-driven price pressures from higher oil and gasoline costs have already pushed up headline inflation in countries such as Canada and are likely to show through in upcoming national data.
Central banks face a difficult policy mix with interest-rate decisions slated in a range of economies (including Turkey, Indonesia and parts of Asia) and major policymakers — including ECB economists — saying they will weigh fresh survey evidence as they set policy.
The coming data flow will be critical in determining whether transitory price shocks morph into a more persistent global growth–inflation dilemma.
đź”— Based On
Business StandardWest Asia conflict revives stagflation dangers for global economy
The Economic TimesWar crisis revives stagflation dangers for global economy
The Straits TimesIran War revives stagflation dangers for global economy






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