Good morning. For CEOs dealing with the uncertainty of inflation, shipping blockades, interest rates, tariffs, income inequality, AI development and more, keep an eye on the IMF-World Bank Spring Meetings in Washington this week. The gatherings offer telling clues on how central bankers, finance ministers and other policymakers view the issues impacting the global economy—and what they intend to do about it. Last year, much of the focus was on the fallout of Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs. This year, it’s on the fallout of Trump’s war on Iran. Will they focus on the issues and policies most critical to growth? That may depend of factors like these:
The Fog of War – IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva has a full agenda, from rising public debt levels and income inequality to global trade and regulation. World Bank President Ajay Banga is focused on job growth, sustainable development, access to technology, food security and building out the economies of the Middle East. And yet we kicked off day one with the U.S. blocking all ships through the Strait of Hormuz while the president insulted the Pope. There are plenty of wars impacting growth right now: the Russia-Ukraine, the Israel-Gaza war, a global trade war and civil wars in Sudan, Myanmar and elsewhere. But the war that’s threatening global energy supplies, upending geopolitics, fomenting a food crisis and likely to curb global growth long after any ceasefire is the Iran war. The job of these gatherings is to mitigate the economic damage. The only country with veto power at both the IMF and World Bank: the United States.
Jerome Powell’s Swan Song – This will be Powell’s last meeting with central bankers as Kevin Warsh is set to take over as Federal Reserve chair next month. Warsh has a strong track record and has many fans. But Powell played a critical role at a vulnerable time for America’s central bank, steadfastly protecting its independence, enforcing accountability, brushing aside insults and continuing to work with the administration to avert crisis. Just last week, he and the Treasury secretary convened Wall Street leaders to talk about cybersecurity concerns arising from Anthropic’s latest AI model. In doing so, he’s helped bolster America’s reputation as an ally in stabilizing the global economy at a time when forces have tried to push it the other way.
Shifting Alliances – Last fall, Georgieva told me at Fortune’s Most Powerful Women 2025 summit that “trade is like water” because “you put in an obstacle, it goes around it.” But water can flow multiple ways. Over the past year, we’ve seen Canada forge a closer relationship with China, Europe coming together against the U.S. over Greenland, and China’s continued ascent. The call to invest in America First is strong, but there may be signals that faith in Brand USA is waning. Contact CEO Daily via Diane Brady at diane.brady@fortune.com
This story was originally featured on Fortune.com
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