The global economy is facing a fresh test as trade, food and financial shocks spread, with developing economies expected to bear the heaviest burden, according to a new UN Trade and Development report released on May 19, 2026. The report says rising geopolitical tensions, higher energy prices and tighter financing conditions are weakening growth prospects and adding new pressure to inflation and food security.
UNCTAD projects global growth will slow from 2.9 percent in 2025 to 2.6 percent in 2026, as higher fuel costs, transport disruptions and market volatility weigh on investment and demand. Trade remains resilient for now, but the agency warns that momentum is fading as uncertainty begins to reshape supply chains and business decisions.
The report says developing economies are especially exposed because they face higher bills for fuel, food and fertilizers at the same time as they deal with currency pressure, tighter borrowing conditions and weaker investor sentiment. It warns that food security is increasingly becoming not only a price issue but also a financial stability concern, particularly for governments with limited fiscal space.
Higher energy prices are also feeding through to food inflation. UNCTAD says fertilizer costs are rising and that volatility in global food trading systems could deepen pressure on low-income countries already struggling with debt and weak public finances.
The report highlights the growing risks to financial stability, saying tighter conditions could amplify debt vulnerabilities in developing countries. It warns that renewed capital-flow pressure and higher debt-service costs could crowd out spending on health, education and social protection.
UNCTAD says renewable energy is becoming more cost-competitive and strategically important because it can reduce exposure to fossil-fuel shocks. The agency calls for stronger international cooperation, more predictable trade conditions, financial safeguards for developing economies and faster investment in affordable clean energy.
The report also places the current shock in a wider context of global economic fragility. It says geopolitical risks are now becoming the dominant source of instability, while weaker productivity growth, fragmented trade and uneven access to capital and technology are making the recovery more uneven across regions.



