The global economy stands at the triple intersection of geopolitical conflicts, rebounding inflation and slowing growth. In its latest outlook, the IMF revised down the global annual growth rate to 3.1% and upgraded inflation expectations to 4.4%, with stagflation risks hanging like a sword of Damocles over the world economy. Amid Middle East conflicts roiling energy markets, diverging policies across major economies and accelerated industrial chain restructuring, the global economy presents a complex landscape featuring lingering growth resilience, widening structural divergence and mounting hidden risks.
The most prominent contradiction in the current global economy lies in the combination of energy shocks triggered by geopolitical strife and sluggish growth. The Middle East conflict that broke out in late February continues to disrupt shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, where around 20% of global crude oil supply passes through. This has pushed Brent crude futures close to $118 per barrel and WTI crude above $106 per barrel. Surging energy prices have directly driven up global inflation. The Eurozone’s inflation has rebounded to 2.6% while its growth rate stands at merely 0.8%, with stagflation characteristics becoming increasingly evident. Inflation pressures are mounting in the UK, and markets expect three interest rate hikes within the year, clouding its economic growth prospects. Rising energy costs are transmitting across the entire production, transportation and consumption chain, squeezing corporate profit margins, eroding residents’ real purchasing power and further weakening the momentum of global economic growth.
In terms of growth, the global economy shows a distinct pattern of dual-core underpinning and K-shaped divergence. China and the United States serve as stabilizers for global growth. China’s economic performance in the first quarter exceeded expectations, with its full-year growth rate projected to stay between 4.5% and 4.8%, driven mainly by consumption recovery and manufacturing upgrading. The U.S. economy remains resilient, with its first-quarter GDP growth rate hovering around 2%. Nevertheless, the restraining effects of the high-interest-rate environment on the real estate and consumption sectors are gradually emerging. While the AI investment boom underpins the technology industry, hidden asset bubble risks are building up. Emerging markets are highly differentiated internally. India leads major economies with a growth rate of 6.5%, and Southeast Asian nations maintain robust growth of 5.6% thanks to industrial chain relocation. By contrast, highly indebted economies such as Argentina and Turkey face the dual plights of soaring inflation and currency depreciation, highlighting pronounced economic fragility.
Divergent monetary policies have become a key variable shaping global economic trends. Faced with renewed inflationary pressures, major central banks have adopted divergent policy stances. The Federal Reserve has kept interest rates unchanged and signaled no rate cuts for the year, keeping policy focused firmly on inflation control. The European Central Bank and the Bank of England face mounting expectations of further rate hikes amid energy-driven inflation, potentially extending their monetary tightening cycles. The Bank of Japan has raised its inflation outlook and hinted at a possible rate hike in June, marking a gradual exit from its ultra-loose monetary policy. Global monetary policy divergence has amplified volatility in cross-border capital flows, leaving emerging markets exposed to capital outflows and currency depreciation, with mounting debt risks. JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon has warned that soaring global government debt is elevating the risk of a credit crisis. The combination of geopolitical tensions, oil price volatility and fiscal deficits may trigger a new round of market turmoil.
Industrial chain restructuring and AI technological iteration are injecting structural momentum into the global economy. Against intensifying geopolitical competition, global industrial chains are shifting from a cost-optimization model to a security-first model, with "de-risking" rather than "decoupling from China" becoming the mainstream approach. Regional trade agreements are being implemented at an accelerated pace, with Southeast Asia, Mexico and other regions speeding up industrial relocation and fostering a diversified supply chain landscape. The pervasive penetration of AI technology has become a core engine driving global investment. Amazon’s AWS business has posted its fastest revenue growth in nearly two years, and major tech giants continue to maintain high capital expenditure. However, the dividends of AI development are unevenly distributed, widening the digital divide between advanced economies and emerging markets. Industrial divergence is intensifying, putting traditional industries under growing pressure to transform and upgrade.
Looking ahead, the global economy will continue to grapple with the tug-of-war between stagflation risks and underlying resilience. Under the baseline scenario, de-escalation of the Middle East conflict is expected by mid-year, bringing energy prices down from elevated levels. The global economy will maintain moderate growth alongside a gradual easing of inflation. Nevertheless, potential risks cannot be overlooked. Should geopolitical tensions escalate and oil prices surge above $120 per barrel, global inflation will rebound further, forcing major central banks to keep raising interest rates. The global economy may slide into sub-par growth below 2.5%, fully materializing stagflation risks. In addition, tail risks including sky-high global debt, a burst of AI asset bubbles and currency crises in emerging markets could trigger sharp market volatility at any time.
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