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Global economy braces for impact as Israel-Hamas war deepens

Flames and smoke billow during Israeli strikes in Gaza on Monday. Markets have reacted since the Hamas attack on Israel, but the full extent of economic impact is not yet clear. (Mohammed Salem/Reuters - image credit)
Flames and smoke billow during Israeli strikes in Gaza on Monday. Markets have reacted since the Hamas attack on Israel, but the full extent of economic impact is not yet clear. (Mohammed Salem/Reuters - image credit)

The war between Israel and Hamas poses a whole new series of risks to an already fragile global economy, and economists are warning it could take some time for the fallout to be clear.

"The global economy is limping along, not sprinting," said International Monetary Fund chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said at a joint meeting of the IMF and the World Bank in Morocco this week.

The annual meeting and its forecasts were all overshadowed by the crisis unfolding in southern Israel and Gaza.

 

  • What questions do you have about the conflict? Send an email to ask@cbc.ca. 

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"It's a humanitarian tragedy and it's an economic shock we don't need," World Bank President Ajay Banga told Reuters.

Hamas militants swept across the border into Israel this weekend unleashing an unprecedented wave of attacks on villages near the Gaza border. More than 1,000 Israelis were killed, and more than 100 were dragged back into captivity in Gaza. Israeli warplanes have responded with days of airstrikes. Palestinian authorities say at least 900 people have been killed in Israeli airstrikes, and at least 4,500 have been wounded.

Drone video footage taken on Sunday shows burned-out cars on the side of the road near an open-air music festival in Israel where Hamas gunmen fired on those attending on Saturday.
Drone video footage taken on Sunday shows burned-out cars on the side of the road near an open-air music festival in Israel where Hamas gunmen fired on those attending on Saturday.

Drone video footage shows burned-out cars on the side of the road near an open-air music festival where Hamas gunmen fired on those attending. (South First Responders/Telegram/Reuters)

As the world watched those events in horror, the price of oil jumped by as much as five dollars per barrel, futures markets fell and the Israeli currency, the shekel, sunk to a seven-year low.

Since then, market reaction has been relatively subdued. But most experts believe that's because no one really knows what will happen in the days ahead.

"Anything in the Middle East has always been high-risk of spreading," said Paul Samson, the president of the Centre for International Governance Innovation in Waterloo, Ont.

Risk of conflict widening

On Monday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said Hamas had made a mistake "of historic proportions."

"We will exact a price that will be remembered by them and Israel's other enemies for decades to come," he said in a prepared statement.

Israel has called up 300,000 reservists and mobilized tanks along the border. The U.S. is moving an aircraft carrier strike group into the region as a show of support for its ally Israel.

Experts say all that raises the stakes that the conflict could widen.

"If this expands and brings in other parties, then the outlook is for even a weaker global economy, even more inflationary pressures. And the markets are going to be finding it hard to deal with that," renowned economist Mohamed El-Erian told the financial news channel CNBC.

Right now, oil traders seem to be watching along with the rest of the world unsure of what comes next.

Rory Johnston, the founder and publisher of the newsletter Commodity Context, says the conflict has a very real risk of drawing in two of the region's biggest oil suppliers: Saudi Arabia and Iran.

"Everyone knows that Iran supports Hamas," said Johnston. "What we don't know is the extent of culpability in the explicit planning and green-lighting of this attack."

Iran's top authority, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, denied any involvement, but heralded the attack as a success.

Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia was nearing completion of what would have been a historic peace and trade deal with Israel. That came after Israel signed trade agreements with Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates in 2020.

Johnston says the Saudi deal reportedly involved boosting oil production, which would cut the cost of gasoline for global consumers. But now, he says, it's unclear what will happen with the Saudi deal adding yet another layer of complexity to the oil market's reaction.

"So, we have the two countries [Iran and Saudi Arabia] that have had the most variable oil production over the past year are now explicitly being implicated and pulled into the conflict and how it evolves from here," he said.

What this could mean for inflation

The price of oil is directly related to the cost-of-living crisis throughout the Western world. If crude oil prices rise, that means consumers pay more at the pumps.

FILE- In this Sunday, Dec. 20, 2015 file photo, a man rides a camel through the desert oil field and winter camping area of Sakhir, Bahrain. OPEC nations have agreed in theory that they need to reduce their production to help boost global oil prices during a meeting in Algeria, but a major disagreement between regional rivals Saudi Arabia and Iran still may derail any cut. (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali, File)

Saudi Arabia was reportedly considering boosting oil production if it could close a trade deal with Israel. (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali, File) (Hasan Jamali/The Associated Press)

"We were hoping inflation was going down," said Mark Manger, a professor of political economy at the Munk School of Global Affairs & Public Policy.

Beyond the price of oil, he says the price of bonds has ticked up since the weekend as investors seek out safe havens like U.S. treasuries and German bonds.

And, he says uncertainty and war weigh heavily on global trade as people quickly try to avoid risk.

"Fair to say, all of this is inflationary," he said.

Samson says consumers, investors and policymakers alike need to brace for the very real chance that however this plays out, it will take a long time to resolve.

"I can't imagine that the dust is settled within a year," he told CBC News. "That doesn't mean a conflict going on, but you know, there is a lot of dust to settle here."