As escalating tensions in the Middle East fuel mounting global recession fears, a senior Australian conservative senator has issued a stark warning that the nation enters this period of economic volatility in a significantly weakened position. The warning comes on the heels of a bleak updated economic outlook from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which cautions that the ongoing energy crisis sparked by Middle East hostilities could push the entire global economy into a sustained downturn.
In its latest quarterly assessment, the IMF projects that Australia’s inflation rate will remain stubbornly above the Reserve Bank of Australia’s (RBA) target range of 2 to 3 percent for at least two more years. Forecasts put national inflation at 4 percent in 2026, with a gradual cooling to only 3.2 percent by 2027—still above the RBA’s policy goal. The Fund also predicts that Australia’s inflation-adjusted real gross domestic product (GDP) growth will decelerate sharply to just 2 percent in 2026, before sliding further to 1.6 percent in 2027.
The international financial body emphasized that the ongoing Middle East conflict has created unprecedented new stress tests for interconnected global economies. Beyond the devastating humanitarian toll and destruction of critical regional infrastructure, the conflict has severely disrupted key global shipping lanes and air transit routes, the IMF noted, with spillover effects that will push commodity and consumer prices upward across every major region.
Appearing on Seven Network’s morning current affairs program *Sunrise* alongside federal Housing Minister Clare O’Neil, Nationals Senator Bridget McKenzie framed the current economic landscape as deeply worrying. “We have entered this new global crisis already stuck in a high inflation, low growth scenario, which has left us in a far weaker position to absorb new shocks,” McKenzie argued. She echoed the IMF’s implicit call for fiscal discipline, stating that the Fund’s outlook confirms what opposition figures have argued for months: the current federal government must rein in its runaway spending to shore up the nation’s resilience.
“The defining test for Treasurer Jim Chalmers in the upcoming May federal budget will be whether he makes the tough, necessary fiscal decisions that the Australian economy needs—decisions he has failed to make in three years in office—to protect our country from the worst impacts of this global crisis,” McKenzie added.
Minister O’Neil pushed back on the criticism, acknowledging the profound uncertainty facing Australian households but outlining the federal government’s approach to balancing urgent relief for struggling families with responsible fiscal management. O’Neil pointed to Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s recent diplomatic outreach across Asia as proof the government is already taking proactive steps to secure critical fuel supplies and insulate Australia from global energy market disruptions.
“You’ve seen the Prime Minister travel across Asia, hold discussions with world leaders to guarantee our supply security and ensure Australia is prioritized for energy exports when markets are strained,” O’Neil said. She added that supporting Australian households is the government’s top priority heading into the budget, noting that many families were already facing severe cost-of-living pressures long before the latest outbreak of Middle East conflict pushed fuel prices higher.
The IMF’s sobering report arrives just one day before Treasurer Chalmers departs for Washington D.C., where he is set to join G20 finance ministers and central bank governors for emergency talks focused on addressing spreading global economic uncertainty. When asked Wednesday whether the IMF’s projections align with internal forecasts from the Australian Treasury, Chalmers acknowledged the gravity of the moment.
“This is an extraordinarily dangerous period for the global economy,” Chalmers told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. “The IMF is forecasting prolonged slow growth and persistent high inflation, and our own internal forecasts match that outlook. We will reflect these global developments in our official budget projections when we hand down the budget in May.”
Chalmers emphasized that the IMF’s warning is a clear alarm bell for the most severe downside scenarios of the ongoing conflict. “What this tells us, over and over, is that an end to this war cannot come soon enough. We need a durable, lasting ceasefire, and we need the Strait of Hormuz—one of the world’s most critical energy shipping lanes—to be fully reopened,” he said. “Even once the conflict ends, we have to accept that many of its economic consequences will be felt around the world, including here in Australia, for months to come. Australians did not create this war, but they are already paying a heavy price for it.”
In its report, the IMF urged advanced economies around the world to implement fiscal restraint, noting that many governments have run overly loose budgetary policies in recent years, worsening inflationary pressures. Critics, including dozens of prominent Australian economists, have argued that the Albanese government’s expansive spending agenda is itself a key driver of domestic inflation.
Chalmers pushed back against that criticism Wednesday, noting that the IMF acknowledges different countries face different economic contexts. “We have already made substantial progress on budget repair over the past three and a half years,” he said. “We acknowledged even before the Middle East conflict broke out that more work needs to be done, and Australians will see the results of that work in the upcoming budget.”
He acknowledged that the outbreak of hostilities in the Middle East has shifted budget priorities, but confirmed the May 12 budget will center on two core pillars: building economic resilience to external shocks and delivering targeted structural economic reform. Chalmers also left the door open to a potential extension of temporary fuel excise cuts if energy prices continue to climb in the coming months, stopping short of ruling out the policy change.
