The escalating Middle East conflict is disrupting trade, energy supplies and food production, raising fresh risks for inflation and global growth.
The Iran war is driving up energy and fertiliser prices, threatening food shortages in poor countries, destabilising fragile states and complicating inflation control at central banks worldwide. View ...
How come it feels like it's all bad news in the global economy these days? According to one economist, something he calls the "doom loop." ...
The latest military confrontation in the Middle East has once again demonstrated how fragile the global energy market can be. Within a matter of hours, geopolitical tensions pushed oil prices to the ...
Growing inequality reflects deeper physical limits on energy and resource extraction rather than purely financial or policy failures. Rising debt and higher interest rates are emerging as binding ...
Here are six charts that explain what’s happening inside China’s economy. A Slumping Property Market. For decades, housing was one of China’s most powerful growth engines, t ...
From markets to spending to debt, usually reliable indicators that forecast where the economy is headed are proving deeply fallible. By Patricia Cohen Patricia Cohen is the global economics ...
This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. This voice experience is generated by AI. Learn more. Technology-driven growth is fundamentally changing the global economy, while development aid ...
How come it feels like it's all bad news in the global economy these days? According to one economist, something he calls the "doom loop." Between trade wars, rising inflation and industries going ...