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Iran war disruptions squeeze emerging markets with inflation trade shocks and rising borrowing costs
Economy
Published on 28 April 2026

Two months on, currencies are taking the hit
Two months after the Iran war began, emerging markets are feeling mounting economic pressure as trade disruptions and higher inflation feed into fiscal strain. Many developing countries are seeing currency depreciation and climbing borrowing costs, unlike some commodity exporters that benefit. With financing stress increasing, global financial aid is becoming more critical.
- Trade disruptions and inflation are worsening across developing economies
- Currency depreciation is driving financial instability in many emerging markets
- Borrowing costs are rising, straining already stretched public finances
- Commodity exporters may gain while others need urgent support
Read the full story at The Economic Times
This summarization was done by Beige for a story published on
The Economic Times
