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Global Recession Fears Mount as Oil Hits $91 and Economic Dominoes Fall

Recession fears are mounting across the global economy as the Iran conflict drives oil to $91 a barrel and triggers a cascade of economic disruptions that economists are now comparing to the worst post-Covid shocks. With more than 25% wiped off oil’s previous price in a single week of buying — the biggest weekly surge since the pandemic — the conditions for a serious global economic slowdown are beginning to take shape.
The transmission mechanism from oil price shock to economic recession is well understood from historical precedent. High oil prices raise costs for transportation, manufacturing, food production, and virtually every other sector. They also reduce consumer spending power, as more income is devoted to energy costs. And they complicate central banks’ efforts to support growth, since the inflationary effects of a supply shock typically prevent the rate cuts that would normally be used to stimulate a slowing economy.
All of these dynamics are now in play. Kuwait has cut oil production due to storage constraints, Saudi Arabia and UAE face the same situation within 20 days, and Qatar’s LNG exports are disrupted. Qatar’s energy minister has warned of oil at $150 if the conflict continues — a price level historically associated with recession in major oil-importing economies. European gas prices have already hit three-year highs.
Central banks have had to rapidly abandon plans for rate cuts. UK rate cut probability fell from 80% to 15% in a week. European money markets are pricing in possible rate rises. For economies that were counting on lower borrowing costs to support growth, this is a significant reversal. Higher rates and higher energy costs simultaneously are a particularly toxic combination for economic output.
Financial markets have priced in the darkening outlook. Asian stocks had their worst week since the pandemic. European and UK equities fell more than 5%. Airlines issued profit warnings of historic proportions. Bond yields surged and gold fell. The word “recession” is appearing with increasing frequency in economic commentary, and the Iran conflict — which began barely a week ago — has already done more economic damage than most such events manage in months.

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