The International Monetary Fund has warned that the Middle East war is rapidly exposing the vulnerability of Sub-Saharan African economies already weakened by debt pressures, inflation shocks, and slowing growth.
In its April 2026 World Economic Outlook, titled Global Economy in the Shadow of War, the IMF said the conflict – triggered by the outbreak of war in the Middle East on February 28 – risks becoming a major economic shock for low-income and commodity-importing economies, particularly in Africa.
The report painted a sobering picture of a region caught between rising fuel prices, tightening financial conditions, and shrinking fiscal space, even as many governments were still recovering from the aftershocks of the pandemic, global inflation, and debt distress.
“The global outlook has abruptly darkened following the outbreak of war in the Middle East on February 28, 2026,” the IMF said.
The Fund warned that the closure of the Strait of Hormuz and damage to critical production infrastructure in the Gulf could unleash “an energy crisis on an unprecedented scale”.
For Sub-Saharan Africa, the implications stretch far beyond energy markets. Many African economies remain heavily dependent on imported fuel, fertiliser and food. As oil prices rise and shipping routes face disruption, governments across the continent are confronting renewed inflationary pressure, weakening currencies and mounting pressure on already strained budgets.
The IMF noted that “commodity-importing emerging market and developing economies with preexisting fragilities” would face some of the sharpest economic pain from the conflict.
Under the IMF’s reference forecast, global growth is projected at 3.1% in 2026, down from earlier expectations, while global inflation is expected to rise to 4.4%. But the Fund warned that a prolonged war or further attacks on energy infrastructure could push global growth down to 2% and drive inflation close to 6%.
For African economies, the consequences could be disproportionately severe. According to Annex Table 1.1.5 on page 43 of the report, growth across Sub-Saharan Africa remains uneven, with some energy exporters benefiting from higher oil prices while import-dependent economies face worsening balance-of-payment pressures.
Nigeria and Angola — Africa’s two largest oil exporters — may enjoy temporary fiscal relief from elevated crude prices, but analysts warn that benefits could be limited by production constraints, weak currencies and domestic structural weaknesses.
Meanwhile, economies such as Ghana, Kenya, Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Senegal are likely to face more difficult trade-offs as rising import costs feed into inflation and public dissatisfaction.
The IMF warned that countries with weak buffers and large financing needs remain particularly exposed to “capital flight and the dollar to appreciate with a flight to safety”.
That dynamic has already begun to emerge across parts of Africa.
Several African currencies have come under renewed pressure against the US dollar as investors shift toward safer assets. Governments already struggling with high debt-servicing costs are now being forced to navigate rising import bills alongside tighter access to international capital markets.
Africa’s old vulnerabilities return
The IMF’s analysis suggests the current crisis is not simply about war in the Middle East. Rather, it is accelerating structural weaknesses that have been building across the global economy for years.
“Emerging markets — especially commodity importers and those with preexisting vulnerabilities — have been affected the most,” the report noted.
For much of the past year, many African economies had begun stabilising after a prolonged period of inflation shocks and debt restructuring negotiations. Inflation in several countries had started moderating, while hopes of lower global interest rates offered some optimism for recovery.
But the IMF said the conflict has now interrupted what had been a fragile recovery trajectory.
“The war interrupted what had been a steady growth trajectory,” the Fund said.
The report pointed to three major transmission channels threatening vulnerable economies: surging commodity prices, inflation expectations and tightening financial conditions.
For African economies, all three are already visible.
Oil-importing states are seeing transport and energy costs rise again, threatening food prices and household purchasing power. Countries with fuel subsidies are confronting renewed fiscal pressure, while those that liberalised fuel pricing face heightened political sensitivity over living costs.
The IMF also warned against broad and untargeted subsidies similar to those deployed during the 2022 energy crisis following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
“Energy price surges are often accompanied by a host of untargeted fiscal measures, such as energy caps or subsidies,” the Fund said, warning such interventions are frequently “poorly designed and very costly for the public purse”.
Instead, it urged governments to adopt “targeted, temporary” measures focused on vulnerable households.
The warning carries particular significance in Africa, where fiscal space has narrowed sharply after years of borrowing, rising debt-servicing costs, and repeated economic shocks.
According to the IMF, downside risks now dominate the global outlook. The report warned that escalating geopolitical tensions, trade fragmentation, and tighter financial conditions could further weaken already vulnerable economies. At the same time, the IMF cautioned that defence spending increases globally may crowd out social spending and trigger “discontent and social unrest”.
For African governments already battling youth unemployment, rising food prices, and fragile social contracts, the political implications could become significant.
The report also highlighted the growing fragmentation of the global economy, warning that countries are increasingly moving toward new geopolitical and trade alignments.
That shift may create opportunities for some African economies seeking alternative trade partnerships, especially as countries diversify supply chains away from traditional routes.
Yet the IMF warned that a more fragmented world also risks reducing investment flows, increasing trade costs, and slowing long-term productivity growth.
“The world economy faces yet another difficult challenge,” IMF Economic Counsellor Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas wrote in the foreword. “And while it may well become more multipolar, it need not become more fragmented.”



