The economic consequences of the war in Ukraine
Expect higher inflation, lower growth and some disruption to financial markets
OVER THE past decade intensifying geopolitical risk has been a constant feature of world politics, yet the world economy and financial markets have shrugged it off. From the contest between China and America to the rise of populist rulers in Latin America and tensions in the Middle East, firms and investors have carried on regardless, judging that the economic consequences will be contained.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “The economic fallout”
Finance & economics February 26th 2022
- The economic consequences of the war in Ukraine
- America’s tariff wall on Chinese imports looks increasingly like Swiss cheese
- Despite bulging debt everywhere, the IMF is struggling to be helpful
- Gold demand has surged in India
- The battle to modernise Italy's corporate governance
- With maverick policies, Turkey cannot hope to bring down prices
- The many virtues of the yen, the rich world’s cheapest currency
- How to avoid a fatal backlash against globalisation
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