30/04/2026 05:16 AST

The Asian Development Bank on Wednesday cut its economic growth forecast for the region to 4.7 percent this year and 4.8 percent next year, down from earlier projections of 5.1 percent for both years, due to the war in the Middle East.

It also raised its inflation forecast for Asia and the ?Pacific to 5.2 percent ?in 2026 from an ?earlier projection of 3.6 percent.

ADB President Masato Kanda called it a "significant downward revision" that reflected how the war had raised energy prices, tightened financial conditions and weighed on economic activity across the region.

"We are confronting systemic, long-lasting disruptions to global ?energy and trade ?networks, not just temporary volatility," he said ?in a statement.

Earlier this month, the ?International Monetary Fund cut its 2026 global growth outlook to 3.1 percent because of the Iran war.

"For commodity exporters directly affected by the conflict, diminished production and exports imply a severe downward revision of GDP growth projections for 2026," the report said.

The scale of the impact depends "on the degree of damage suffered in energy and transportation infrastructure as well as the dependence on the Strait of Hormuz and availability of alternative export routes," the Washington-based lender added.

The IMF warned that since February, global equity prices have declined 8 percent while sovereign bond yields have risen sharply, driven by a jump in energy prices and market expectations of higher inflation.

Bond market volatility has also been spurred by rising debt-to-GDP levels and the greater issuance of short-term securities which are more vulnerable to rollover risks during rising inflation. That ?could lead funding ?markets to tighten, which has spurred broader turmoil in the past, the ?IMF said.

The ADB said if ?the conflict escalated it could lead to a more severe economic impact. As an example, it said if oil prices spiked in May and then stayed high, growth in developing Asia and the Pacific could slow to 4.2 percent this year and 4 percent in 2027, with inflation surging to 7.4 percent this year.

"Central banks should focus on limiting excessive market volatility while keeping a close watch on inflation expectations," it said.


Reuters

Ticker Price Volume
Index Closing Change
NIKKEI 225 36,581.76 -251.51 (-0.68%)
DAX 18,699.40 181.01 (0.97%)
S&P 500 5,626.02 30.26 (0.54%)
Lebanon's Central Bank Governor: 90% of Depositors Are a Priority, IMF Deal is 'Last Credible Pathway'

04/05/2026

Lebanon's central bank Governor Karim Souaid said on Sunday a prioritization of smaller depositors that make up mostly 90 percent of accounts is both economically rational and socially necessary, add

Asharq Al Awsat

China has now dropped tariffs on imports from every African country except 1

04/05/2026

A China policy giving Africa's biggest economies tariff-free access to its market for the next two years came into effect Friday while its economic rival the United States seeks to impose new import

AP

ECB keeps rates unchanged but June hike firmly on table

01/05/2026

The European Central Bank left interest rates unchanged as expected on Thursday but extensively debated a hike to combat soaring inflation and signalled both on and off the record that it may pull th

Reuters

US Federal Reserve holds interest rates for third straight month

30/04/2026

The US Federal Reserve on Wednesday decided to hold rates steady, as the central bank continues to monitor inflationary effects of the Iran conflict.

In a meeting of the Federal Open Markets

Reuters

China Leaders Urge Self-Reliance to Combat Economic 'Difficulties'

29/04/2026

China's leaders urged greater self-reliance in the technology sector and industrial chains and stronger domestic demand to combat "difficulties and challenges" facing the economy at a high-level meet

Asharq Al Awsat