The United Nations on Tuesday cut its forecast for global economic growth, saying the Middle East crisis had reignited inflationary pressures and heightened ​uncertainty.

A U.N. press release summarizing the mid-year update to the global ‌body’s World Economic Situation and Prospects said :

  • Global GDP growth is forecast at 2.5% in 2026, compared with an estimated 3.0% in 2025, 0.2 percentage points below the January projection ​and well below pre-pandemic growth rates.
  • A modest recovery is projected at ​2.8% in 2027.
  • Solid labor markets, resilient consumer demand, and AI-driven trade ⁠and investment are expected to provide support, but the downgrade underscores a ​further weakening of a subdued global outlook.
  • Surge in energy prices has delivered windfall ​gains for energy companies, but intensified cost pressures for households and businesses.
  • In developed economies, inflation is forecast to rise from 2.6 % in 2025 to 2.9% in 2026 and in developing economies ​from 4.2% to 5.2%.
  • Fertilizer supplies have been disrupted, pushing up costs, which ​could reduce crop yields, putting upward pressure on food prices.
  • Global financial markets have remained resilient, ‌but ⁠inflation expectations have driven short-term bond yields higher.
  • The most severe damage is in Western Asia, where growth is projected to plunge from 3.6% to 1.4%, exacerbated by damage to infrastructure, trade, and tourism.
  • The United States is expected ​to remain comparatively resilient, ​with growth projected ⁠at 2.0 % in 2026, broadly steady from 2025 on strong household demand and tech investment.
  • Europe is more exposed, with reliance ​on imported energy straining households and businesses. EU growth ​is projected ⁠to slow from 1.5% to 1.1% and in Britain from 1.4% to 0.7%.
  • China’s diversified energy mix, sizable strategic reserves, and policy support are providing a buffer, with ⁠its ​growth projected to moderate from 5.0 % to 4.6 %.
  • India’s ​output is still expected to expand by 6.4 % against 7.5%.
  • In Africa, average growth is projected to ​ease slightly, from 4.2% to 3.9%.