1. How is the conflict impacting Europe?
The conflict in the Middle East, while first and foremost a human tragedy, also represents a supply shock for the global economy that will intensify the longer the war goes on. For Europe, a prolonged conflict would be particularly challenging, as it would represent the third major shock in just over five years after the COVID pandemic and the war in Ukraine.
A prolonged war would further undermine the region’s competitiveness at a time when many of its key industries are already reeling from high energy costs and intensifying competition from China.
If the conflict were to end relatively swiftly, the global and European economies could still emerge largely unscathed, albeit with some lingering scar tissue. However, the longer it continues, the greater the risk of more lasting damage. In the worst-case scenario, this could lead to 1970s-style stagflation.
Looking back at our key expectations for the year, we anticipated:
- a likely pick-up in growth on the back of loose monetary policy, fiscal expansion and (mostly) US deregulation;
- higher-than-expected inflation in the second half of the year; and
- recession and stagflation as tail risks at most.
Now, even in the best-case scenario, inflation is likely to pick up more and sooner than predicted while growth momentum is likely to stall, if only temporarily. A longer-lasting conflict would obviously worsen these outcomes. European consumer confidence, while structurally underpinned by large savings balances, is a key variable to watch here, as it could help to tip the economy from a slowdown into recession.