Amid growing global uncertainty triggered by the escalating Middle East crisis, the World Bank Group has moved to reassure vulnerable economies that it will provide urgent support amid rising commodity prices and supply chain disruptions that threaten macroeconomic stability.
The Bretton Woods institution warned that the fallout from the conflict is spreading rapidly beyond crude oil markets, with sharp increases recorded in fertilisers and other critical agricultural inputs, developments that could worsen inflationary pressures and heighten food security risks, especially for import-dependent countries.
It disclosed that several emerging market economies have already reached out for assistance as logistics bottlenecks and price shocks begin to take a toll on domestic economies.
“A number of the World Bank Group’s clients in emerging markets have reached out to us as the conflict in the Middle East has started to impact commodity prices and logistics,” the institution stated, adding that it is engaging governments, private sector players and development partners to mitigate the impact of the unfolding crisis.
Checks by the Bank show that disruptions to major shipping routes are driving up costs, while supply risks are cascading from energy markets into agriculture. Within a one-month period, crude oil prices surged by nearly 40 per cent, liquefied natural gas shipments to Asia rose by almost two-thirds, and nitrogen-based fertilisers recorded a nearly 50 per cent spike in March alone.
The development, it noted, underscores the speed at which geopolitical tensions are feeding into global inflation dynamics.
In response, the World Bank said it is activating a broad-based intervention framework designed to provide immediate relief while laying the groundwork for medium-term recovery.
“The World Bank Group is moving quickly to help client countries to navigate this crisis. We are ready to respond at scale, combining immediate financial relief with policy expertise and private sector support for the recovery of jobs and growth,” it said.
According to the institution, the intervention will draw on its existing financing portfolio, crisis-response mechanisms, and pre-arranged facilities to deliver rapid support to governments, businesses, and households.
It added that the strategy would subsequently transition to fast-disbursing financing instruments anchored on sound policy frameworks, while its private sector arms would inject liquidity, trade finance and working capital into struggling firms.
Despite the intervention plans, the Bank cautioned that the situation remains fluid, warning that prolonged conflict or damage to critical infrastructure could significantly deepen economic vulnerabilities across already fragile markets.
“Clearly, this is an evolving situation, and we cannot predict the full range of impacts. The longer this lasts… the more challenging this will be for our clients,” it stated, stressing its commitment to safeguarding recent economic gains in affected countries.
