
After three months, the fallout of the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is spreading, with developing countries bearing the brunt of the shortfall.
Before the war, roughly a quarter of the world’s seaborne crude oil and a fifth of the world’s liquefied natural gas passed through the strait. The region is also among the world’s largest suppliers of products derived from oil and gas, including fertilizer and naphtha, a liquid used in everything from plastic wrap to industrial inks.
Much of the world has largely experienced the crisis through price shocks. Physical supply shortages have afflicted economies across Asia. Developing countries everywhere, especially in Asia, have been hit the hardest, as shortfalls of oil, gas and their derivatives have strained everything from farming and cooking to medical imaging. Governments across the region have rationed power, drawn down emergency stockpiles and scrambled for alternative supplies.
“It’s not just a price shock, it’s explicit shortages,” said Krishna Srinivasan, a director at the International Monetary Fund. “In the context of shortages, industry scales back, people lose their jobs, and this has a secondary impact on growth,” Mr. Srinivasan said.
Submission Statement: The Global Economy is resilient to a point. Supply shocks not just from crude oil but derivatives will be rippling through the supply chain with unforeseen consequences.
Posted by Adminisnotadmin
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My nearly two decades of adulthood have been defined entirely by politicians doing dumb shit egged on voters for no rational reason and I’m tired.
Link for the global poor: [Article](https://removepaywalls.com/https://www.nytimes.com/2026/05/27/business/hormuz-global-shortages-gas.html)