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Outgoing IMF chief economist sees risks, shifting trade ties and continued uncertainty on global outlook

By Thomson Reuters Jun 26, 2026 | 3:42 PM

By Andrea Shalal

WASHINGTON, June 26 (Reuters) – Strategic petroleum releases helped avert a sharper rise in oil prices as a result of the war in the Middle East, but the global economy faces significant downside risks if a fragile ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran doesn’t hold, IMF chief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said on Friday.

Those reserves were now fairly ​depleted, which meant countries would have less room for maneuver if the conflict flared again, Gourinchas told Reuters in ‌an interview before he leaves the International Monetary Fund to return to the University of California, Berkeley next week.

Gourinchas, who has long warned that growing geopolitical tensions could lead to a more fractured global economy, gave no details about a fresh forecast to be released by the IMF on July 8, after he returns to academia.

But he suggested the global lender could return to offering a baseline forecast – instead of the three scenarios that it released in April. It was ‌the second ​time during his tenure that the Fund chose to skip a baseline forecast, the first ⁠being in April 2025 after U.S. President ⁠Donald Trump upended global trade with tariffs against imports from most countries in the world.

IMF spokeswoman Julie Kozack on Thursday left open whether the IMF would continue with the three growth scenarios or revert to a more traditional baseline forecast.

Last month, with the Strait of Hormuz still closed and benchmark oil prices above $100 per barrel, she had said the global economy was moving ​from the more benign “reference forecast,” which assumed a quick end to the conflict and growth of 3.1% in 2026, to an “adverse scenario” with 2.5% growth.

In both 2025 and 2026, there was little historical precedent on which to base a credible baseline forecast, Gourinchas said, which ⁠meant economists had to “be humble” and step back from baseline forecasts, opting instead ⁠for a range of outcomes mapped out in scenarios. But such cases should be rare.

“We don’t want ​to do it too often,” he said, although he conceded that uncertainty – and risks – remained high.

Gourinchas said quick releases of strategic reserves and changes ​in production by refiners had helped avert even steeper increases in oil prices, with just 3% of the ‌global oil removed from the market instead of the 10-15% initially predicted.

But risks would rise and countries would have less oil in reserve to cushion further cuts in supply if the ceasefire fell apart and hostilities resumed.

Trump on Friday blamed Iran for an attack on a ship near Oman which he said had violated their ceasefire, highlighting the fragility of a preliminary deal to end the Iran war.

SHIFTING TRADE TIES, ⁠DEALS WITHOUT THE US

Gourinchas said global trade flows and relationships were clearly shifting in the wake of Trump’s tariffs, noting the European Union’s completion of trade agreements with Latin America and India after decades of negotiations.

“All of a sudden, in less than one year, they’re both ⁠signed. This is not a coincidence. You can’t ‌afford not to deepen trade relations with other countries out there,” he said, noting that many ⁠of these emerging trade agreements did not include the United States.

At the same time, tariffs and ​other economic sanctions ‌generally had only limited utility, he said, without specifically mentioning Trump’s accelerated use of tariffs ​to address a ⁠wide range of policy disputes.

“There is a view that having these kinds of choke points or this critical leverage is really important, but I think what we are seeing is how quickly the global economy tries to find ways around them,” he said.

“You do have leverage in the short term, and then actors on the other side respond. They are not passive, they find ways to either circumvent, accelerate their own innovation, develop new trade ties with other partners, and basically those tools become blocked,” he said. “In the medium- to long-term, they almost never work.”

(Reporting by ​Andrea Shalal; Editing by Andrea Ricci)