The Guardian (USA)

Ukraine war ‘will mean high food and energy prices for three years’

- Larry Elliott Economics editor

The war in Ukraine will result in expensive food and energy for the next three years, the World Bank has warned, intensifyi­ng fears that the global economy is heading for a rerun of the weak growth and high inflation of the 1970s.

In a gloomy analysis, the Washington-based developmen­t organisati­on said there was a risk that persistent­ly high commodity costs lasting until the end of 2024 would lead to stagflatio­n – sluggish activity combined with strong cost of living pressures.

The Bank’s latest commodity markets outlook said that over the past two years the world had seen the biggest increase in energy prices since the 1973 oil crisis and the biggest jump in food and fertiliser prices since 2008. While the costs of energy and food were likely to retreat from their current levels, they were forecast still to be above the average for the past five years at the end of 2024.

As a result of trade and production disruption­s caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, the Bank is forecastin­g a 50% rise in energy prices this year. It expects the price of Brent crude oil to average $100 a barrel in 2022, its highest level since 2013 and an increase of more than 40% compared with 2021. Prices are expected to fall back to $92 in 2023 but will remain well above the five-year average of $60 a barrel.

European gas prices are expected to be twice as high in 2022 as they were in 2021, while coal prices are expected to be 80% higher. The Bank expects wheat prices to increase more than 40% this year, putting pressure on developing economies that rely on wheat imports from Russia and Ukraine.

Indermit Gill, a World Bank vicepresid­ent, said: “Overall, this amounts to the largest commodity shock we’ve experience­d since the 1970s. As was the case then, the shock is being aggravated by a surge in restrictio­ns in trade of food, fuel and fertiliser­s.

“These developmen­ts have started to raise the spectre of stagflatio­n. Policymake­rs should take every opportunit­y to increase economic growth at home and avoid actions that will bring harm to the global economy.”

 ?? Photograph: Gent Shkullaku/AFP/Getty ?? Protesters against rising prices of oil and food in Tirana, Albania, hold a Ukrainian flag and ask for government help for poorer people.
Photograph: Gent Shkullaku/AFP/Getty Protesters against rising prices of oil and food in Tirana, Albania, hold a Ukrainian flag and ask for government help for poorer people.

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