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IMF warns ‘unprecedented’ energy crisis could trigger global recession as Australia prepares for G20 fuel talks

about 9 hours ago
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The International Monetary Fund has warned the US-Israel war on Iran risks creating an “energy crisis of an unprecedented scale” that could tip the global economy towards recession.The grim warning contained in the IMF’s latest World Economic Outlook comes as Jim Chalmers prepares to attend the organisation’s spring meetings in Washington DC this week, where he said he would be “joining with other countries continuing to call for an enduring end to the war”.As the United States began its blockade of the critical strait of Hormuz in an effort to force Iran back to the negotiating table, the IMF’s chief economist, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, said “the world economy faces another difficult test”.“The closing of the strait of Hormuz and serious damage to critical facilities in a region central to global hydrocarbon supply raise the prospect of a major energy crisis should hostilities continue,” Gourinchas said.As higher fuel costs smash household and business confidence in Australia, the treasurer will hold bilateral meetings with his foreign counterparts from the nation’s major fuel suppliers, including South Korea, Singapore, Japan and China.

In a statement on Tuesday night, Chalmers said Australians were “paying a hefty price for events on the other side of the world”,“I’ll continue Australia’s calls for an enduring ceasefire, an end to the conflict in the Middle East and the proper reopening of the strait of Hormuz because that’s what the global economy desperately needs,” he said,“From an economic perspective, a proper end to this war can’t come soon enough,”The latest World Economic Outlook report outlines three scenarios, one of which assumes a relatively benign baseline stance – where the Iran war ends in a few weeks’ time and energy markets have returned to normal by the middle of the year,In this scenario, Australia’s economy will grow at a steady 2% in 2026 – a downgrade of 0.

1 percentage points on the IMF’s January forecasts – and by 1.7% in 2027, a heftier 0.5 percentage points downgrade.Australia’s inflation rate will average 4% this year – a sharp lift from the 2.9% average rate in 2025 – before easing to 3.

2% in 2027, the IMF said.However, it showed unemployment will remain in the low 4% in this year and the next.Were the war to end in the coming few weeks, global growth this year would only come in 0.2 percentage points below the IMF’s prewar forecasts in January, at 3.1%.

Inflation under this scenario would be 4.4% in 2026 – still meaningfully above the previous estimate of 3.8%.But as analysts struggle to keep up with the rapidly changing Middle East conflict, the IMF outlined two more pessimistic – albeit increasingly likely – scenarios.In an “adverse” scenario where oil prices average around US$100 a barrel through 2026, the world economy will grow by 2.

5% this year, against the 3,3% forecast in January,Global inflation would climb to 4,4%,In a “severe” scenario where a persistent energy shock sees oil prices average US$110 this year and US$125 in the next, global growth plunges to just 2% in 2026, while inflation would average 5.

8%.“This would mean a close call for a global recession (growth rate below 2%), which has happened only four times since 1980, with the latest two occasions corresponding to the global financial crisis and the Covid-19 pandemic,” the report said.The IMF did not model the impact on Australia from these worst-case scenarios.With under a month until the budget on 12 May, Chalmers said the IMF’s report “shows it’s a dangerous moment for the global economy”.“We’re weighing all of this extreme uncertainty as we prepare a budget focused on resilience and reform.

”Anthony Albanese has promised Labor’s most ambitious budget yet, arguing the fuel crisis has sharpened the need for reform.There is widespread speculation the budget will include changes to tax discounts and negative gearing rules for property investors, a potential additional tax on booming LNG exports, and reforms to expensive electric vehicle and battery subsidies.The government has also flagged a push for additional budgetary savings, even as economists predict higher commodity prices will deliver tens of billions of dollars in extra tax revenue.With expectations of further cost of living relief come 12 May, Gourinchas warned governments against “popular” non-targeted support measures.“Given the lack of fiscal space with still elevated budget deficits and rising public debt, any fiscal support should remain narrowly targeted and temporary,” he said.

“Avoiding fiscal stimulus is also critical when inflation is rising, so as not to complicate central banks’ task.”
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Reeves arrives at IMF with little leeway to prove its UK downgrade wrong

The Iran war is bad news for the global economy. But for some countries, the unfolding conflict is having a bigger impact than for others. The International Monetary Fund’s verdict is that Britain is the G7’s biggest loser.Amid the rising damage from the Middle East war, the Washington-based fund warned UK economic growth rate would be 0.5 percentage points lower this year than it had predicted back in January – the biggest downgrade among the club of wealthy nations

about 5 hours ago
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BP’s new boss to overhaul structure after retreat from green strategy

BP’s new boss has set out plans to reinstate the company structure the fossil fuel supermajor ditched six years ago as part of its failed attempt to reorganise the business to pursue a green agenda.Meg O’Neill told staff that the 117-year-old company would return to a “simpler, stronger” two-business arrangement including an upstream oil and gas production unit and a downstream business focused on refining and distributing fuels and retail activities.“In service of becoming a simpler, stronger, more valuable BP, we intend to build an organisation with a clear upstream and downstream,” O’Neill said.The planned overhaul is the latest step in dismantling the legacy of former chief executive Bernard Looney who in 2020 restructured BP to include a gas and low-carbon energy division as part of a wide-ranging mission to “reimagine” BP as a green energy company.The green agenda raised concerns among BP’s investor base, and made the company a target of activist investor Elliott Management, which called for BP to return its focus to fossil fuels and simplify its structure

about 6 hours ago
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AI companies make powerful tech – but they’re also savvy marketers

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, the Guardian’s US tech editor, writing to you from my happy village in Pokopia.Artificial intelligence companies make powerful products. They also make outlandish claims.Last week, Anthropic released Claude Mythos, an AI model focused on cybersecurity, which has inspired widespread thrill and panic over how capable it is said to be

about 10 hours ago
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Don’t make Marshal Foch’s mistake on AI | Letters

Emma Brockes’ article struck a chord (It’s finally happened: I’m now worried about AI. And consulting ChatGPT did nothing to allay my fears, 8 April). I am reading Marc Bloch’s Strange Defeat, in which the eminent French historian and soon-to-be-executed resistance worker gives a first-hand account of the collapse of the French army in 1940. He attributes the debacle at least in part to a failure of imagination on the part of the French general staff, who were incapable of grasping that technology, and war, had fundamentally changed since 1918.Brockes’ article suggests that we, and our leaders, are suffering from the same inability to understand that a technology which is currently amusingly alarming will develop in less amusing ways – the future Marshal Ferdinand Foch had, according to Bloch, earlier dismissed aircraft as being a toy for hobbyists and not of any military interest

1 day ago
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Nicky Henderson on Constitution Hill and the yips: ‘The best jumper you’ll ever see and he lost it’

The venerated trainer could not find a guru in the world to cure one of the greatest hurdlers in history but a surprise switch to the Flat promises a career swansongNicky Henderson is 75 years old and, after almost half a century of training horses, he has seen everything in the strange and compelling world of racing. But the extraordinary and still evolving story of his great old horse Constitution Hill makes even Henderson pause in his study. It’s a sunlit afternoon in Lambourn and we’ve just left the mighty but complex horse in his stable.Standing next to Henderson for a photoshoot, Constitution Hill had been typically calm. He then took a slow walk outside before, having waited patiently for lunch, the horse ambled inside for a good feed

about 11 hours ago
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The Breakdown | Will Bath or anyone else stop the Bordeaux Bègles juggernaut in Europe?

Last week Northampton’s director of rugby, Phil Dowson, made an interesting comparison between boxing and rugby. He suggested there was a decent chance his side’s Champions Cup quarter-final against Bath would prove good viewing because of the clubs’ contrasting philosophies around how best to play the game. “Styles make fights” is a familiar ring mantra and the same is increasingly true in top-level rugby.On the one hand you had Northampton, all razor-sharp angles and dextrous hands. On the other was Bath, renowned for their knack of wearing their rivals down and then picking them off in the closing stages

about 12 hours ago
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UK’s armed forces are in a sad state – and they have only themselves to blame

about 7 hours ago
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Reform activist suspended over racist and antisemitic comments remains election agent

about 12 hours ago
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Starmer’s ‘corrosive complacency’ on defence has put UK in peril, says ex-Nato chief

about 14 hours ago
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Renewed ties with EU needed to boost UK security and economy, says Starmer

1 day ago
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Nige and Zia set out plan to send ‘Boriswave’ traitors to the gulag | John Crace

1 day ago
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Shabana Mahmood says Southport inquiry report exposed ‘systematic failures across multiple public sector organisations’ – as it happened

1 day ago