Energy markets are bearing the brunt of the instability, with oil prices expected to average 32% higher this year. This surge is effectively stalling a two-year cooling period in global inflation. While developed economies attempt to offset these costs through AI-driven productivity, the disparity between regions is widening. The United States remains insulated as a net energy exporter, with projected GDP growth of 2.3% bolstered by tax policy and corporate investment.
Conversely, the Eurozone faces a sharper downturn, with growth expectations sliding to 0.9%. Heavy reliance on energy imports leaves the bloc vulnerable to price shocks, which are simultaneously squeezing household incomes and straining government budgets through increased debt servicing and defense spending. Labor markets in the region are also signaling a shift, as employment growth stalls at 0.3%. Elsewhere, China manages a 4.6% expansion as public works and tech manufacturing offset a domestic property crisis, while India continues to lead among major economies with 6.4% growth, driven by resilient domestic consumption.

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