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Saturday, 20 June 2026

 

Global Geopolitical Fragmentation, Energy Market Stress,

and a Bayesian Game-Theoretic Scenario Assessment

Macroeconomic Trajectories for the United States, Europe, East Asia, the Middle East, Latin America, and Sub-Saharan Africa amid the Strait of Hormuz Crisis


June 20, 2026


Executive Summary

As the G20 enters the second half of 2026, the global economy is being shaped less by a single crisis than by the interaction of several simultaneous ones: an unresolved war between the United States and Iran whose ceasefire architecture is being tested in real time, a new and assertive monetary policy posture at the U.S. Federal Reserve under incoming Chair Kevin Warsh, a euro area that has just resumed raising interest rates to defend its inflation target, and an OECD growth outlook that now hinges explicitly on how long Persian Gulf energy disruptions persist. This report extends and updates an earlier preliminary assessment in light of verified developments through June 20, 2026, and offers G20 policymakers a Bayesian, game-theoretic framework for interpreting how rational state and market actors are likely to update their beliefs — and their behavior — as the Hormuz situation evolves.

The most consequential development of the past several days is also the most fragile. On June 17, 2026, U.S. President Donald Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian signed a memorandum of understanding in Versailles, on the margins of the G7 summit, establishing a sixty-day extension of the ceasefire and committing Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz while the United States lifted its naval blockade of Iranian ports. For roughly three days, the arrangement appeared to be holding: U.S. Central Command reported that dozens of merchant ships and many millions of barrels of oil resumed transiting the strait, and Vice President J.D. Vance described shipping conditions as having returned essentially to their pre-war baseline. On Saturday, June 20 — the date of this report — Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy announced that the strait was closed again, citing Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon that killed at least sixteen people, including children, as a violation of the broader ceasefire architecture that Tehran insists must cover all fronts, including Lebanon, even though Israel was not a direct signatory to the U.S.-Iran memorandum.

This single sequence — reopening, partial normalization, and renewed closure within the same week — is the clearest available illustration of the report's central analytical claim: the region has not moved from war to peace, but from open war to a condition of managed instability in which control over the Strait of Hormuz functions as a renewable instrument of coercive diplomacy. Iranian officials have been explicit on this point. An adviser to Iran's Supreme Leader stated publicly that energy flows through the Middle East will remain halted as long as the U.S.-Iran memorandum “remains only on paper,” while Tehran's state-aligned media has urged its negotiators not to arrive at talks in Switzerland “empty-handed.” The capacity to open and close a chokepoint carrying roughly one-fifth of the world's seaborne oil trade has become, in effect, Iran's principal source of negotiating leverage, deployed independently of its degraded conventional military capacity.

Financial markets are pricing this condition of recurring, reversible disruption rather than either durable peace or sustained war. Brent crude, which spiked above one hundred eighteen dollars per barrel in the first quarter of 2026 following the initial closure of the strait, has since retraced most of that increase and was trading near eighty dollars per barrel on June 19, even as the renewed closure was being announced — evidence that markets had already discounted a meaningful probability of exactly this kind of intermittent disruption rather than treating the June 17 memorandum as a clean resolution.

Two institutional forecasts anchor this report's macroeconomic baseline. The OECD's June 2026 Economic Outlook explicitly abandons a single-point forecast in favor of two named scenarios: a time-limited disruption scenario in which Persian Gulf energy production and exports normalize from the third quarter of 2026 onward, under which global growth slows from 3.4 percent in 2025 to 2.8 percent in 2026 before recovering to 3.1 percent in 2027; and a prolonged disruption scenario, in which disruptions persist into the second half of 2027, under which global growth falls to 2.1 percent in 2026 and 1.8 percent in 2027 — a slowdown the OECD characterizes as the deepest in four decades outside of the 2008–2009 financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic. This report's Bayesian scenario architecture is calibrated against, and extends, that institutional framework, while incorporating a third, more optimistic structured de-escalation path.

On monetary policy, the G20's two largest central banks have moved in the same hawkish direction but for related reasons. The Federal Reserve, in Kevin Warsh's first meeting as chair on June 17, held its benchmark rate at 3.50–3.75 percent but removed prior guidance toward a 2026 rate cut, with nine of eighteen policymakers now projecting at least one hike before year-end and the median dot implying a year-end rate of 3.8 percent — a full twenty-five basis points above the prior projection. The European Central Bank, on June 11, actually raised its three key rates by twenty-five basis points, lifting the deposit rate to 2.25 percent, and revised its 2026 growth projection down to 0.8 percent while lifting its headline inflation projection to 3.0 percent, explicitly attributing both moves to the war's effect on energy markets. Both decisions reflect a shared judgment that an energy-driven, supply-side inflation shock has reduced the room central banks have to support growth through lower rates, even as that same shock weakens the growth outlook each bank is mandated to support.

Section III of this report develops a Bayesian, game-theoretic forecast of growth, policy interest rates, and crude oil prices across six regions — the United States, the euro area, East Asia, the Middle East and North Africa, Latin America, and Sub-Saharan Africa — under three scenarios. Rather than presenting these as a static table, each regional and scenario-specific finding is developed analytically, with explicit attention to the belief-updating dynamics through which governments, central banks, and market participants revise their expectations as new information about the conflict arrives. The report's central conclusion is that the defining macroeconomic feature of the second half of 2026 will not be a single shock and recovery, but a prolonged equilibrium of managed instability, in which recurring, partially reversible disruptions to energy and shipping markets sustain an elevated and durable risk premium across global asset classes — a condition that calls for institutional resilience rather than crisis-by-crisis improvisation as the organizing principle of G20 economic policy coordination.

I. The Emerging Geopolitical Landscape: From Open War to Managed Instability

I.i. The Transition from Rules-Based Stability to Competitive Fragmentation

The post-Cold War assumption that economic interdependence would steadily reduce geopolitical competition has been challenged with growing force since 2022, and the events of 2026 have accelerated rather than reversed that trend. Major powers continue to pursue security-oriented economic strategies in which capital allocation, technology development, and energy procurement are organized increasingly around geopolitical alignment rather than pure market efficiency. The United States continues to prioritize technological sovereignty and strategic competition with China; China continues to pursue industrial self-sufficiency while expanding influence across the Global South; Europe continues to balance competitiveness against strategic autonomy; and Persian Gulf and other Middle Eastern powers increasingly act as independent strategic actors with their own bargaining leverage rather than passive participants in great-power competition. The result remains a gradual fragmentation of globalization rather than its wholesale reversal — but the Hormuz crisis of 2026 has demonstrated, with unusual clarity, how quickly fragmentation in one strategic domain (energy transit) can cascade into financial markets, inflation dynamics, and central bank policy across every G20 economy simultaneously.

I.ii. The Anatomy of the 2026 Iran War and Its Ceasefire Architecture

The conflict that has reshaped the 2026 global outlook began on February 28, 2026, when the United States and Israel launched air operations against Iran, including the killing of Iran's Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei. Iran responded with missile and drone strikes against Israel, U.S. regional bases, and Persian Gulf states, and — critically for the global economy — the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps Navy began boarding and attacking merchant vessels and laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway through which approximately one-quarter of the world's seaborne oil trade and one-fifth of global liquefied natural gas trade had passed before the war. The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates that global oil supply fell by roughly thirteen and a half percent between February and April 2026, with Persian Gulf production down forty-five percent at the trough, while global gas supply is now expected to run approximately fifteen percent below pre-war projections given the halt of Qatari LNG exports following damage to production facilities.

What followed was not a single ceasefire but a sequence of fragile, repeatedly violated arrangements. An initial two-week ceasefire mediated by Pakistan in early April collapsed within days; a subsequent U.S. naval blockade of Iranian ports, paired with continued Iranian restrictions on the strait, kept the waterway effectively closed through most of the spring, with Abu Dhabi's national oil company reporting in April that some two hundred thirty loaded tankers were waiting inside Persian Gulf unable to depart. A further round of U.S. airstrikes on June 10, prompted by stalled negotiations, triggered another Iranian closure declaration before the two sides finally signed the more durable memorandum of understanding on June 17, at Versailles, on the margins of the G7 summit hosted by French President Emmanuel Macron.

The June 17 memorandum established a sixty-day window for negotiating final terms, during which Iran committed to reopening Hormuz and the United States agreed to lift its naval blockade of Iranian ports; President Trump stated separately that, absent a final agreement within that window, the United States could begin imposing tolls on shipping through the strait. For a brief period the agreement appeared to be functioning: U.S. Central Command reported fifty-five merchant ships transiting the strait on June 20 alone, carrying more than seventeen million barrels of oil, and Vice President Vance characterized conditions as having returned essentially to their pre-war baseline. Industry analysts cautioned, however, that mine-clearance operations alone could take weeks, meaning that even a fully cooperative reopening was always going to be a matter of gradual normalization rather than an immediate switch back to pre-war shipping patterns.

The reopening, partial normalization, and renewed closure of the Strait of Hormuz within a single week is the clearest available demonstration that the region has shifted from open war to a condition in which control over a single chokepoint functions as a renewable instrument of coercive diplomacy.

That brief normalization proved short-lived. On the morning of June 20, 2026 — the date of this report — Israeli strikes in southern Lebanon killed at least sixteen people, including two children, hours after a separate U.S.-brokered Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire had nominally taken effect. Iran's IRGC Navy responded within hours by declaring the Strait of Hormuz closed to all vessel traffic, warning ships that their safety could not be guaranteed and that mines remained a risk to any vessel that approached. Iran's military command characterized the closure explicitly as the "first step" in response to what it called U.S. and Israeli breaches of the memorandum's commitments, while a senior adviser to Iran's Supreme Leader stated publicly that energy flows through the Middle East would remain halted for as long as the memorandum existed "only on paper." U.S. Central Command, by contrast, maintained that the strait remained open and that Iran does not control it, reporting that vessel traffic had in fact increased through the day.

This contradiction between Iranian and American characterizations of the strait's status is itself analytically significant. It indicates that physical control of the waterway has become less determinative than the parties' competing narratives about who is honoring the ceasefire — narratives each side is using instrumentally ahead of nuclear and final-status talks that were scheduled to begin in Switzerland on June 21. Iranian state-aligned media explicitly urged Tehran's negotiating team, led by Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, not to arrive at those talks "empty-handed," framing the strait closure as deliberate leverage rather than a security response alone. The structural lesson for G20 policymakers is that the strait's reopening was never a single discrete event but the first move in an iterated negotiating game that is likely to feature repeated cycles of partial opening and renewed closure through the remainder of the sixty-day window and potentially well beyond it.

I.iii. Lebanon and the Escalation Ladder

Lebanon remains the most dangerous proximate escalation point precisely because it sits outside the formal U.S.-Iran memorandum while functioning, in practice, as the trigger for Iranian actions that affect the entire global economy. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been explicit that Israel does not consider itself bound by the U.S.-Iran ceasefire's terms regarding Lebanon, and Israeli forces have continued operations against Hezbollah even as Washington and Tehran have sought to stabilize their bilateral relationship. The toll has been severe: more than four thousand Lebanese deaths have been recorded by the Lebanese Health Ministry since fighting began in early March, alongside thirty-six Israeli military fatalities in southern Lebanon and northern Israel over the same period. Hezbollah, for its part, has continued rocket fire — more than fifty rockets were reported fired at Israeli positions overnight into June 20 alone, despite a ceasefire that had nominally taken effect the previous afternoon.

From a Bayesian perspective, this is precisely the dynamic the original assessment anticipated: governments continuously revise their beliefs about adversaries' intentions and about the durability of deterrence based on incomplete and rapidly changing information, and Lebanon supplies a steady stream of such information shocks. Each Israeli strike that produces civilian casualties functions as a costly signal that Iran can credibly interpret either as a deliberate Israeli rejection of the broader ceasefire architecture or as an uncoordinated, lower-level military decision independent of U.S.-Iran diplomacy. Because Iran cannot fully distinguish between these two interpretations, it has structured its response — closing Hormuz — to be effective under either reading: it imposes a cost on the United States regardless of whether Washington can or cannot control Israeli operations in Lebanon, thereby shifting the burden of de-escalation onto the U.S.-Israel relationship rather than onto Iran's own conduct.

I.iv. Persian Gulf States, Strategic Infrastructure, and Diversification Under Duress

Persian Gulf Cooperation Council states have continued to pursue diversification of energy export routes away from exclusive dependence on Hormuz, but the war has both validated and complicated that strategy. Saudi Arabia and the UAE shut in meaningful production during the worst months of the conflict, and the resumption of Saudi-owned tanker movements through the strait on June 18 — the first since the war began more than three months earlier — was treated by markets as a significant positive signal precisely because it had been so long delayed. At the same time, pipeline and export infrastructure that bypasses Hormuz, including routes through Saudi Arabia to the Red Sea and through Iraq toward the Mediterranean, remains exposed to a different set of risks: militia activity, proxy warfare, and the same underlying regional instability that produced the Hormuz crisis in the first place. For G20 investors and policymakers, the strategic lesson is that diversification of physical routes reduces but does not eliminate exposure to the conflict, because the conflict's economic transmission mechanism is not solely about a single chokepoint but about the broader erosion of predictability across the region's energy infrastructure as a whole.

I.v. Undersea Data Infrastructure: The Persistent Gray-Zone Frontier

The vulnerability of submarine cable networks connecting Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Middle East through the Red Sea and Persian Gulf region remains an underappreciated structural risk that has not featured prominently in public reporting on the conflict to date, but which the broader pattern of the war reinforces rather than diminishes. Global financial transactions, cloud computing operations, AI systems, military communications, and international commerce depend heavily on these data arteries. Because disruption of digital infrastructure can produce substantial economic consequences while remaining below conventional thresholds of war — much as Iran's strait closures have operated below the threshold that would trigger a full military response — this gray-zone domain should be regarded by G20 leaders as a second, latent transmission channel through which regional instability could affect the global economy with little warning, even during periods when the Hormuz situation itself appears calm.

II. Global Economic Outlook: Two Institutional Scenarios and a Hawkish Policy Pivot

II.i. The OECD's Two-Scenario Framework

The most important methodological development since the original assessment was drafted is that the OECD itself has abandoned single-point forecasting for 2026 and 2027 in favor of an explicit two-scenario framework, a structure this report adopts and extends. In its June 2026 Economic Outlook, titled Under Pressure, the OECD states plainly that the conflict in the Middle East has become the dominant force shaping the global economic outlook, and that the duration of Persian Gulf energy disruptions is the single most important determinant of the difference between a moderate slowdown and what OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann has called the deepest global slowdown in four decades outside of the 2008–2009 financial crisis and the COVID-19 pandemic.

Under the OECD's time-limited disruption scenario — which assumes Persian Gulf energy production and exports progressively return to pre-conflict levels beginning in the third quarter of 2026 — global growth slows from 3.4 percent in 2025 to 2.8 percent in 2026, before recovering to 3.1 percent in 2027. Within that baseline, the United States is projected to grow 2.0 percent in 2026 and 1.8 percent in 2027; the euro area only 0.8 percent in 2026, picking up to 1.2 percent in 2027; China moderating to 4.5 percent and then 4.3 percent; Canada dipping to 1.2 percent before rebounding to 1.7 percent; the United Kingdom rising from 0.9 to 1.1 percent; and Japan falling to just 0.6 percent in 2026, reflecting its particular exposure to Persian Gulf energy supplies despite substantial strategic reserves. G20 headline inflation under this baseline is projected at 4.0 percent in 2026, easing to 3.1 percent in 2027.

Under the OECD's prolonged disruption scenario — in which supply constraints persist into the latter half of 2027 — global growth falls to just 2.1 percent in 2026 and 1.8 percent in 2027, a trajectory the OECD says would push several economies into or close to recession and meaningfully raise unemployment. OECD-wide growth in this scenario falls to 0.9 percent in 2026 and 0.5 percent in 2027, compared with 1.5 percent and 1.7 percent under the time-limited scenario. Inflation would be pushed higher by an additional 0.4 percentage points in 2026 and a further 1.3 percentage points in 2027 relative to the baseline, a combination the OECD's chief economist, Stefano Scarpetta, has said would likely force most central banks to raise policy rates by between fifty and seventy-five basis points beyond their current settings. Scarpetta has also noted that the impact would fall most heavily on energy-importing Asian economies and on developing economies with limited fiscal capacity, weak social safety nets, and more fragile currencies — while identifying continued artificial-intelligence-related investment, concentrated heavily in the United States, as the principal offsetting source of upside momentum in an otherwise deteriorating global outlook.

OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann has stated that the global economy entered 2026 with robust momentum, but that the outlook has weakened significantly since the conflict began, with effects likely to be felt for some time regardless of how or when the war itself concludes.

Both OECD scenarios occur against a backdrop the institution describes as otherwise solid underlying momentum, supported by strong artificial-intelligence-related investment, production, and trade, alongside lower effective tariff barriers than had prevailed earlier in the decade. This matters for the Bayesian framework developed in Section III: the conflict is best understood not as the sole driver of the 2026 outlook but as a large, partially reversible shock superimposed on an economy that retains genuine structural strength, particularly in technology-intensive sectors. That structural strength is precisely what allows the range between the OECD's two named scenarios to remain as wide as it is — markets and policymakers are not pricing a uniform deceleration but a genuinely bimodal distribution of outcomes contingent on the war's path.

II.ii. Inflation Dynamics: A Supply-Side Phenomenon with Second-Round Risk

Inflation in 2026 differs structurally from the inflation of 2021 through 2023. The earlier episode reflected a combination of pandemic-era fiscal expansion, supply-chain disruption, and loose monetary policy; the current episode is overwhelmingly a supply-side, geopolitically driven phenomenon concentrated in energy and energy-adjacent inputs such as fertilizer. The OECD's own framing is instructive: it has consistently argued that a supply-driven rise in prices need not by itself trigger a monetary policy response, provided inflation expectations remain well anchored, but that a response becomes necessary if broader price pressures intensify through second-round effects on wages and core inflation, or if growth weakens severely enough to require offsetting stimulus that monetary policy cannot easily provide. The events of the past several weeks suggest that several major central banks have judged the risk of second-round effects to be material enough to act preemptively, a judgment examined in the next subsection.

II.iii. Central Banks Move in a Hawkish Direction: The Fed Under Warsh and the ECB

Two decisions taken within a week of each other illustrate how the world's most important central banks are responding to an energy-driven inflation shock with monetary tightening rather than the gradual easing many investors had expected entering 2026.

The Federal Reserve: Kevin Warsh's First Meeting as Chair

On June 17, 2026, the Federal Open Market Committee held its benchmark federal funds rate unchanged at 3.50 to 3.75 percent in the first meeting chaired by Kevin Warsh, who was confirmed by the Senate on May 13 after being nominated by President Trump. The decision itself — a hold, following three successive twenty-five-basis-point cuts in September, October, and December of 2025, and holds in January, March, and April of 2026 — was widely anticipated. What was not fully anticipated was the magnitude of the hawkish shift embedded in the Committee's updated projections. The median dot now shows the federal funds rate ending 2026 at 3.8 percent, fully twenty-five basis points above the prior projection of 3.4 percent issued in March, with nine of eighteen policymakers now projecting at least one rate hike before year-end and six of those projecting two separate twenty-five-basis-point increases. The Committee's Summary of Economic Projections also raised its year-end PCE inflation projection sharply, to 3.6 percent from 2.7 percent in March, while trimming its real GDP growth projection to 2.2 percent from 2.4 percent.

Equally significant for G20 observers is the change in communication style. The Committee's post-meeting statement ran to just one hundred thirty words, compared with three hundred forty-one words after the April meeting, and explicitly removed prior language indicating a bias toward future rate cuts. Chair Warsh, who has been an outspoken critic of what he regards as Fed overcommunication, declined to submit his own projection to the dot plot — an unusual choice he defended by noting his skepticism of forward guidance as a policy tool — and announced the formation of five internal task forces to review the Fed's communications practices, balance sheet policy, data sources, productivity, and labor market analysis. At his press conference, Warsh stated unambiguously that the Committee would deliver price stability and reaffirmed the Fed's commitment to its two percent inflation target, even as consumer prices in May rose 4.2 percent year over year, the fastest pace since April 2023, and the personal consumption expenditures price index rose 3.8 percent over the twelve months through April.

This sequence is analytically important beyond its direct effect on U.S. borrowing costs. Citi's research has noted that incoming Fed chairs have historically used their first meeting to establish hawkish credibility with markets, and that the average sell-off in two-year Treasury yields around a new chair's first meeting is roughly six basis points, compared with about one basis point for an average FOMC meeting — a pattern Warsh's first meeting appears to have reproduced, notwithstanding President Trump's own publicly stated preference for lower rates. The result is a Federal Reserve that enters the second half of 2026 demonstrably more willing to tolerate slower growth in service of its inflation mandate than markets had priced at the start of the year, a posture that interacts directly with the Bayesian scenario analysis in Section III.

The European Central Bank: A Rate Increase, Not an Insurance Hike

The European Central Bank's Governing Council moved even more directly than the Fed. On June 11, 2026, it raised its three key policy rates by twenty-five basis points, lifting the deposit facility rate to 2.25 percent, the main refinancing rate to 2.40 percent, and the marginal lending rate to 2.65 percent, effective June 17. President Christine Lagarde was explicit that the decision was "robust across a range of scenarios" the ECB had modeled for how the war might evolve, and that it reflected the institution's judgment that the war in the Middle East is generating inflation pressures sufficient to warrant tightening despite a simultaneously weakening growth outlook — a combination one journalist at the post-meeting press conference described as resembling the trade-offs of the 1970s, a characterization Lagarde pushed back on directly, noting that projected growth of 0.8, 1.2, and 1.4 percent for 2026 through 2028 did not, in her assessment, constitute stagnation or recession.

The ECB's updated staff projections, prepared under the baseline scenario, foresee headline inflation averaging 3.0 percent in 2026, easing to 2.3 percent in 2027 and 2.0 percent in 2028 — each figure revised upward from the institution's March projections, reflecting a higher assumed path for energy prices that is expected to feed through into food, goods, and services inflation via indirect and second-round effects. Core inflation, excluding energy and food, is projected at 2.5 percent in both 2026 and 2027. The euro area growth projection of 0.8 percent for 2026 represents a meaningful downward revision from the institution's earlier baseline, which Lagarde attributed directly to "a more pronounced impact of the war on commodity markets, real incomes and confidence." Crucially, Lagarde declined to characterize the June decision as merely a precautionary "insurance hike," leaving open the possibility that it marks the beginning of a renewed tightening cycle rather than an isolated adjustment — a question that will not be resolved until subsequent meetings provide further data on whether energy-driven inflation is beginning to broaden into core prices and wages.

II.iv. Interest Rate Policy as a Shared G20 Dilemma

Considered together, the Fed's hawkish hold and the ECB's actual rate increase indicate that the world's two most influential central banks have reached a broadly similar judgment: that an energy-driven inflation shock currently warrants tighter, not looser, monetary policy, even though the same shock is simultaneously weakening the growth outlook each institution is separately mandated to support. This is the textbook definition of a central-bank dilemma, and it is one shared in some form by the Bank of Japan, the Bank of England, and most large emerging-market central banks through the remainder of 2026. If policy rates remain elevated, investment slows, debt-service burdens rise, and growth weakens further; if rates are reduced prematurely against a backdrop of an active, unresolved energy shock, inflation expectations risk becoming unanchored in a way that would require even larger and more disruptive tightening later. The OECD's own policy guidance — that fiscal support for households and businesses should be targeted, temporary, and structured to preserve incentives for energy conservation, with monetary policy held in reserve unless growth weakens substantially or price pressures broaden — reflects this same underlying logic, and provides the policy baseline against which the regional projections in Section III should be read.

III. A Bayesian Game-Theoretic Scenario Forecast

III.i. Methodological Note: Belief Updating Without Formal Notation

This section forecasts growth, policy interest rates, and crude oil prices across six regions under three scenarios, using a Bayesian game-theoretic logic expressed entirely in analytical language rather than mathematical notation, in keeping with the requirement that all material in this report be presented as discursive text rather than as tables or formulas. The underlying reasoning, however, follows a precise structure that is worth making explicit before turning to the regional findings.

Each actor relevant to this analysis — the government of Iran, the government of Israel, the Trump administration, European policymakers, OPEC+ producers, and financial market participants collectively — holds a prior belief about the likely path of the conflict and about the other actors' intentions. As new information arrives, such as the renewed closure of Hormuz on June 20, each actor updates that prior belief in proportion to how surprising the new information is given what was previously believed, and in proportion to how reliable or credible the source of that information is judged to be. A government that already expected intermittent disruptions updates its beliefs only modestly when another disruption occurs; a government that had genuinely believed the war was ending updates much more sharply. This is precisely why Brent crude's relatively muted reaction to the June 20 closure — a renewed disruption that left prices still far below their first-quarter peak — is itself informative: it indicates that markets had already assigned substantial probability to exactly this kind of recurrence, and were not meaningfully surprised by it.

Layered onto this belief-updating process is a strategic, game-theoretic dimension: each actor's optimal action depends on what it expects other actors to do, and each actor knows that other actors are reasoning in the same way about it. Iran's decision to close the strait is not simply a security response but a calculated signal aimed at shaping U.S. and Israeli behavior ahead of the June 21 talks in Switzerland; the United States' insistence that the strait remains open and that Iran does not control it is itself a counter-signal aimed at denying Iran the negotiating leverage that an acknowledged closure would confer. Both statements can be simultaneously true in a narrow factual sense — some vessels may continue transiting even as Iran claims the strait closed — precisely because the dispute is as much about controlling the narrative that shapes future beliefs as it is about the immediate physical movement of tankers. The three scenarios that follow represent three different long-run equilibria of this repeated, iterated game, distinguished primarily by whether the costs of continued brinkmanship eventually exceed the benefits each side derives from it, for both Tehran and Washington and Jerusalem.

III.ii. Scenario Alpha: Managed Instability (Estimated Probability: Approximately 55 Percent)

This scenario, which corresponds closely to the OECD's time-limited disruption baseline, remains the most probable path and is consistent with the pattern actually observed over the past several days: intermittent strait closures followed by renewed openings, recurring but contained proxy attacks in Lebanon and Iraq, and a negotiating process in Switzerland that repeatedly stalls and resumes without either fully collapsing or fully concluding. In game-theoretic terms, this is the equilibrium in which all major actors have concluded that the costs of full-scale renewed war exceed the benefits of continued limited coercion, but none has yet concluded that the benefits of full cooperation exceed the value of retaining leverage. Iran retains the strait as a renewable bargaining chip rather than surrendering it permanently; the United States and Israel retain the option of further strikes without escalating to a campaign aimed at regime change or total disarmament; and energy markets price a persistent risk premium rather than either a war premium or a peace dividend.

United States

Growth in the United States under this scenario tracks the OECD's baseline closely, in the range of 1.8 to 2.2 percent for 2026, consistent with both the OECD's 2.0 percent projection and the Federal Reserve's own June projection of 2.2 percent year-end growth. The labor market should remain resilient, supported by continued artificial-intelligence-related capital expenditure, but consumer spending growth moderates as energy and gasoline prices remain volatile and headline inflation stays elevated relative to target. On interest rates, the Federal Reserve's own June projections are the most credible Bayesian anchor available: a federal funds rate ending 2026 near 3.75 to 4.00 percent is more likely than not, reflecting the median dot of 3.8 percent and the real possibility, assigned by half the Committee, of one or more additional hikes should energy-driven inflation fail to recede toward target by the autumn. Crude oil under this scenario should fluctuate broadly in an eighty to one-hundred-dollar-per-barrel range for Brent, consistent both with Goldman Sachs's recently revised fourth-quarter forecast of eighty dollars per barrel and with the elevated volatility implied by a strait that continues to open and close intermittently rather than settling into either a fully open or fully closed state.

Europe (Euro Area)

European growth in this scenario should track close to the ECB's own June baseline of 0.8 percent for 2026, rising toward 1.2 to 1.4 percent in 2027 as energy markets gradually stabilize, though risks remain skewed to the downside given Europe's particular sensitivity to energy import costs relative to the United States. On interest rates, the ECB's June 11 increase to a 2.25 percent deposit rate should be read as more likely than not to represent at least one further small increase later in 2026 if energy prices remain elevated through the summer, given Lagarde's explicit refusal to characterize the move as a one-off insurance hike; a plausible range for the deposit rate by year-end is 2.25 to 2.75 percent. European crude oil exposure operates primarily through the Brent benchmark and shipping-cost channels via the Suez and Red Sea corridors as well as Hormuz, meaning European inflation remains particularly sensitive to any disruption that affects both chokepoints simultaneously, a correlated risk this report flags for particular attention by European finance ministries.

East Asia

China's growth should remain comparatively resilient in the four point three to four point eight percent range, consistent with the OECD's 4.5 percent baseline projection, supported by substantial strategic energy reserves, diversified import routes including overland pipelines from Russia and Central Asia, and continued strength in semiconductor and technology-related exports that contributed meaningfully to first-quarter 2026 growth in China, Korea, and Japan alike. Japan is more exposed under this scenario, with growth likely in the 0.5 to 1.0 percent range, consistent with the OECD's 0.6 percent baseline figure, reflecting Tokyo's heavier reliance on Persian Gulf energy imports even though its substantial strategic reserves provide a buffer against the most acute price spikes. South Korea and Taiwan should perform similarly to Japan, cushioned by resilient technology export demand but exposed on the energy-import side. None of the major East Asian economies are expected to undertake major policy rate changes under this scenario; the Bank of Japan in particular is likely to maintain a cautious, data-dependent stance given Japan's own delicate balance between import-driven inflation and continued fragility in domestic demand.

Middle East and North Africa

{ersian Gulf hydrocarbon exporters benefit, somewhat paradoxically, from elevated energy revenues even amid continued security disruption, with Saudi Arabia in particular expected to sustain growth above three percent according to IMF assessments discussed at the Fund's spring meetings, reflecting both elevated prices on the barrels it is able to export and a gradual resumption of production previously shut in in self-protection during the worst months of the war. Qatar and Iraq face more severe downgrades given their direct exposure to the conflict's physical disruption of LNG and pipeline infrastructure respectively. For the region as a whole, this scenario implies continued elevated but volatile crude oil revenue, persistent insurance and shipping cost premiums that erode some of that revenue benefit, and a policy environment in which Persian Gulf sovereign wealth funds continue large-scale international investment even as domestic fiscal planning incorporates substantial uncertainty about the durability of any given month's export volumes.

Latin America

Latin America experiences this scenario primarily as a terms-of-trade and financial-conditions story rather than a direct security exposure. Energy-exporting economies, including Brazil's offshore production and Mexico's state oil sector, benefit modestly from elevated global crude prices, while energy-importing economies face higher import bills that weigh on growth and add to domestic inflation pressures already complicated by the region's historically higher sensitivity to U.S. dollar interest rates. Regional growth in the moderate range of 2.0 to 2.5 percent appears consistent with continued commodity export support broadly offsetting tighter global financial conditions transmitted through a Federal Reserve that, as described above, is now more likely to hold or raise rates than to cut them, a dynamic that historically has tightened financial conditions across Latin American economies with significant dollar-denominated debt.

Sub-Saharan Africa

The IMF's regional analysis for Sub-Saharan Africa, presented at the Fund's spring 2026 meetings, provides the most directly applicable institutional anchor for this region. IMF staff have described 2025 as a relatively strong year for the region, supported by resilient global growth, strong non-oil commodity prices, and supportive external financial conditions, but project a cumulative growth downgrade of 0.4 percentage points across 2026 and 2027 as a direct consequence of the war, alongside a rise in median regional inflation from 3.4 percent in 2025 to 5.0 percent in 2026, driven by elevated oil and fertilizer prices and, in some cases, fuel shortages. Nigeria's growth has been revised down by 0.3 percentage points to 4.1 percent in 2026, reflecting a balance between higher fuel, fertilizer, and shipping costs weighing on non-oil activity and elevated oil prices supporting the country's hydrocarbon export earnings. The IMF has also identified a compounding headwind specific to this scenario and region: declining bilateral foreign aid, with cuts in the range of sixteen to twenty-eight percent recorded in 2025 and expected to continue, which reduces the fiscal space available to many Sub-Saharan governments to cushion their populations against the food and fuel price shock even as that shock intensifies.

III.iii. Scenario Beta: Retaliatory Cascade (Estimated Probability: Approximately 25 Percent)

This scenario corresponds to the OECD's prolonged disruption case and would emerge from a genuine strategic miscalculation rather than from the kind of bounded, repeated brinkmanship described in Scenario Alpha — for instance, an Israeli strike in Lebanon producing casualties on a scale that forces Iran's leadership to conclude that further restraint is no longer politically survivable domestically, or an attack on a U.S. naval vessel that the Trump administration judges requires a major military response rather than a negotiating signal. In Bayesian terms, this is the scenario in which one or more actors receives information sufficiently surprising relative to their prior beliefs that they discard the existing equilibrium altogether rather than making a marginal adjustment to it. Given that thirty-six Israeli soldiers and more than four thousand Lebanese have already died in the Lebanon theater alone, and that the IRGC has explicitly warned of "further measures" should Israeli operations continue, the tail risk of exactly this kind of discontinuous escalation cannot be dismissed, even though it remains the less probable of the three paths considered here.

Under this scenario, Hormuz disruptions intensify and become more sustained rather than intermittent, shipping insurance premiums surge as they did during the worst weeks of the first quarter, and financial markets move decisively into risk-off positioning. The OECD's own prolonged disruption figures provide the most credible anchor for the macroeconomic consequences: global growth falling to 2.1 percent in 2026 and 1.8 percent in 2027, with the United States approaching stagnation in the 0.5 to 1.0 percent range, the euro area falling into outright recessionary conditions of negative to roughly flat growth, and China's growth falling more sharply than under Scenario Alpha, into the 3.5 to 4.0 percent range, primarily through weaker trade and substantially higher energy import costs. Energy-importing Asian economies, and Japan in particular, would suffer the most acute pressure among major economies, consistent with the OECD's specific warning that Asian economies are disproportionately exposed in this scenario given their reliance on Persian Gulf energy supplies.

Crude oil under this scenario could plausibly retrace toward or beyond its first-quarter 2026 peak of roughly one hundred eighteen dollars per barrel for Brent, with a meaningful probability of spiking into the one-hundred-twenty-to-one-hundred-fifty-dollar range if disruptions become both broader in geographic scope and longer in duration than the worst weeks already experienced this year. Inflation would accelerate globally under this path, and the combination of weakening growth with rising prices would confront central banks with a genuinely stagflationary dilemma; the OECD itself has estimated that energy-driven price pressures in this scenario would likely force most central banks to raise policy rates by an additional fifty to seventy-five basis points beyond their current settings, even as growth deteriorates — precisely the kind of trade-off both the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank have already begun signaling they are prepared to accept in their more modest June 2026 actions. For Latin America and Sub-Saharan Africa, this scenario implies a more severe version of the financial-stress dynamics already visible in Scenario Alpha, with several highly indebted emerging economies in both regions facing acute pressure as dollar funding costs rise in tandem with import bills, a combination that historically has preceded sovereign debt crises in both regions.

III.iv. Scenario Gamma: Structured De-escalation (Estimated Probability: Approximately 20 Percent)

This scenario represents the upside case in which the June 17 memorandum, despite its rocky first week, ultimately holds: the Switzerland talks scheduled for June 21 produce sufficient progress that Iran judges further coercive use of the strait counterproductive to its own economic interests, a sustainable Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire in Lebanon removes the principal trigger for renewed Iranian retaliation, and the sixty-day window established by the memorandum is used to negotiate durable final terms rather than simply to manage an extended stalemate. In game-theoretic terms, this is the equilibrium in which both sides conclude that the costs of continued brinkmanship — to Iran in the form of forgone oil revenue and continued economic isolation, and to the United States and Israel in the form of sustained regional instability and global economic costs that a U.S. administration facing November midterm elections has clear incentive to avoid — now exceed the benefits each derives from retaining unilateral leverage.

Under this scenario, maritime traffic normalizes more fully and durably than the brief three-day window observed between June 17 and June 20, mine-clearance operations are completed within the weeks industry analysts have estimated, and proxy activity in Lebanon and Iraq declines as Hezbollah and allied militias reduce operational tempo in response to a genuine de-escalation rather than a tactical pause. Global growth under this path would likely exceed the OECD's time-limited disruption baseline, potentially approaching the 2.9 to 3.0 percent range the OECD itself projected in its earlier March interim outlook before the worst of the conflict's economic effects had fully materialized. The United States would likely sustain growth above 2.2 percent, the euro area could recover toward 1.3 to 1.5 percent, and China would benefit from improved external demand and lower input costs across its manufacturing base.

Crude oil under this scenario should stabilize in a lower range, plausibly between sixty-five and eighty dollars per barrel for Brent, consistent with Goldman Sachs's own recently revised fourth-quarter forecast of eighty dollars and the firm's expectation that Persian Gulf crude exports return to pre-war levels by the end of July — a full month earlier than Goldman had previously projected, itself a signal that informed market participants are assigning meaningful weight to exactly this more optimistic path. Central banks would gain considerably greater flexibility under this scenario: the Federal Reserve's currently hawkish dot plot would likely be revised back toward the cuts the Committee had projected as recently as March, and the European Central Bank could plausibly pause or even begin reversing its June rate increase by early 2027 as energy-driven inflation pressures recede. For Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America, this scenario would represent meaningful relief on both the fiscal and current-account sides, particularly given the IMF's identification of fertilizer prices and food insecurity as especially acute regional vulnerabilities that a sustained de-escalation would directly ease.

IV. Strategic Conclusions for G20 Leaders

The defining challenge confronting the G20 in the second half of 2026 is not a single geopolitical crisis but the close interaction of security competition, energy vulnerability, technological rivalry, and economic fragmentation, all operating simultaneously and reinforcing one another. The events of the past several days — a ceasefire signed with considerable diplomatic effort at Versailles on June 17, followed within seventy-two hours by a renewed closure of the Strait of Hormuz on June 20 — should be read by G20 leaders not as evidence that diplomacy has failed, but as direct empirical confirmation of this report's central analytical claim: the region has entered a durable condition of managed instability in which control over critical chokepoints functions as a renewable, low-cost instrument of coercive bargaining, deployable by Iran independent of its degraded conventional military capacity, and likely to recur repeatedly through the remainder of the sixty-day negotiating window established by the memorandum and quite possibly beyond it.

IV.i. The Strait of Hormuz Remains the Single Most Important Near-Term Risk to the Global Economy

Even partial or temporary disruptions to Hormuz traffic generate economic effects disproportionate to their physical duration, because shipping insurers, financial markets, and downstream industrial users price the probability of renewed closure rather than waiting to observe it directly. The fact that Brent crude retraced roughly the entirety of its first-quarter gains even before the June 20 closure, and then absorbed that closure with only a modest reaction, demonstrates that markets are now pricing a probability distribution over outcomes rather than reacting to each individual headline as a discrete shock. This is, in one sense, a sign of market maturity and adaptive resilience. It also means, less reassuringly, that the underlying risk premium embedded in energy prices, shipping insurance, and broader financial conditions is likely to remain structurally elevated for as long as the conflict's resolution remains genuinely uncertain — which, on the evidence of the past week, is likely to be measured in months rather than days.

IV.ii. Economic Resilience Increasingly Depends on Infrastructure Security Broadly Defined

Global economic resilience in this environment depends not only on the physical security of energy infrastructure and shipping routes, but increasingly on the security of satellite networks and undersea communications cables that carry the financial, logistical, and AI-related data flows on which modern economic activity depends. These assets have become, in effect, central components of national and collective economic security, even though they remain largely outside the formal mandates of most G20 finance ministries and central banks. The G20's institutional architecture for monitoring and responding to economic risk was built primarily around financial and macroeconomic indicators; the events of 2026 suggest that architecture needs to be extended to incorporate physical and digital infrastructure risk as a first-order macroeconomic variable rather than a peripheral security concern.

IV.iii. The Most Probable Future Is Neither Comprehensive Peace Nor Renewed Major War

Based on the Bayesian scenario analysis developed in Section III, the most probable trajectory for the remainder of 2026 is neither a durable comprehensive peace nor a return to the full-scale hostilities of February through May, but a prolonged period of managed instability characterized by recurring shocks, elevated volatility, and a persistent geopolitical risk premium embedded across energy, shipping, insurance, defense, and financial markets. This finding should reshape how G20 finance ministries approach near-term fiscal and monetary planning: scenario-contingent rather than single-point forecasting, of the kind the OECD itself has now adopted, should become the standard methodology for G20 economic surveillance for as long as this condition persists, rather than a temporary departure from normal practice.

IV.iv. Recommendations

  • Maintain and, where necessary, expand strategic petroleum reserves and coordinated release mechanisms among G20 energy-importing economies, calibrated to the intermittent rather than continuous nature of the Hormuz disruption pattern observed to date.

  • Ensure that any fiscal support extended to households and businesses to cushion energy price volatility remains targeted, temporary, and structured to preserve incentives for energy conservation, consistent with the OECD's explicit policy guidance, in order to protect medium-term fiscal sustainability across G20 economies already carrying elevated public debt.

  • Treat central bank communication and policy calibration as a coordination problem rather than a purely domestic one: the near-simultaneous hawkish pivots by the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank illustrate how a shared external shock can produce correlated tightening across major currency areas, with compounding effects on global financial conditions that are larger than the sum of each individual decision.

  • Extend G20 economic risk-monitoring frameworks to explicitly incorporate undersea cable and satellite infrastructure security alongside traditional energy and shipping route risk, given the latent but largely unaddressed exposure of global financial and AI-related data infrastructure to the same regional instability driving the energy shock.

  • Provide targeted multilateral support, through the IMF, World Bank, and bilateral channels, to the most exposed Sub-Saharan African and Latin American economies identified in this report, particularly given the compounding effect of declining bilateral foreign aid on top of elevated fuel and fertilizer costs in Sub-Saharan Africa specifically.

  • Support continued, well-resourced mediation efforts, including the Pakistani, Qatari, and Swiss channels currently in use, while recognizing that durable de-escalation likely requires parallel progress on the Lebanon track, given that Israeli-Hezbollah dynamics haverepeatedly functioned as the proximate trigger for renewed Hormuz disruptions even though Lebanon sits formally outside the U.S.-Iran memorandum itself.

For the G20, the central policy challenge of the second half of 2026 is therefore not crisis resolution alone, but the construction of institutions and decision-making frameworks capable of sustaining economic stability amid a form of geopolitical uncertainty that may not resolve cleanly for a considerable period. Resilience — understood as the capacity to absorb recurring, partially reversible shocks without systemic disruption — rather than optimism about any single negotiating breakthrough, should be regarded as the defining strategic requirement facing G20 economic policymakers through the remainder of the decade.


Sources

This report draws on verified reporting and institutional publications current as of June 20, 2026, including: the OECD Economic Outlook, Volume 2026, Issue 1 ("Under Pressure") and accompanying press materials; the European Central Bank's June 11, 2026 monetary policy decision and press conference transcript; the U.S. Federal Reserve's June 17, 2026 FOMC statement, Summary of Economic Projections, and chair press conference; the International Monetary Fund's April 2026 World Economic Outlook, Spring 2026 press briefing transcript, and Sub-Saharan Africa Regional Economic Outlook; the U.S. Energy Information Administration's first-quarter 2026 petroleum markets review; and contemporaneous reporting from Reuters, the Associated Press, CNN, NBC News, Bloomberg, CNBC, NPR, the Washington Times, Fox Business, and CBS News on the status of the Strait of Hormuz, the June 17 U.S.-Iran memorandum of understanding, and developments in Lebanon through June 20, 2026.

This report is preliminary and prepared for internal review. Given the exceptional fluidity of the underlying situation — illustrated by the reopening and renewed closure of the Strait of Hormuz within a single week — all scenario probabilities and regional projections should be understood as point-in-time assessments subject to revision as the situation evolves, including in particular the outcome of talks scheduled to begin in Switzerland on June 21, 2026.


Wednesday, 17 June 2026

THE FEDERAL RESERVE AT AN EPISTEMOLOGICAL CROSSROADS 

Monetary Policy, Institutional Transformation, and Global Financial Stability under Chair Kevin Warsh




G20 Policy Memorandum

Prepared for the November 2026 G20 Leaders' Summit

Updated June 17, 2026  |  Washington, D.C.





Executive Summary

The June 17, 2026 meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) may ultimately be remembered not for its interest-rate decision, but for marking the beginning of a profound and deliberate transformation in the intellectual architecture of American monetary policy.

The FOMC voted unanimously — twelve to zero — to maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 3.50–3.75 percent for a fourth consecutive meeting. The decision itself was universally anticipated. Markets had assigned the probability of a hold at approximately 97 percent in the days preceding the meeting, and the rate outcome produced only modest reaction. Yet the significance of the day lay entirely elsewhere.

In his inaugural press conference as Chair, Kevin Warsh — sworn into office on May 22, 2026, succeeding Jerome Powell whose chairmanship expired in May — initiated what appears to be a systematic and far-reaching re-evaluation of the Federal Reserve's communication strategy, forecasting framework, and institutional decision-making architecture. He announced the creation of five distinct internal task forces, addressed each of the Fed's major operational domains, and explicitly declared the end of forward guidance as an instrument of monetary policy. He further declined to submit his own interest-rate projection into the Summary of Economic Projections — making him the sole member of the FOMC not represented in the dot plot — and announced a comprehensive year-end review of Fed communications, including press conferences, minutes, transcripts, and the dot plot itself.

These developments represent far more than a stylistic shift in leadership. They signal a potential transition from the highly transparent, expectations-management model that characterized much of the Bernanke–Yellen–Powell era toward a more discretionary, structurally oriented, and epistemologically skeptical policy framework. Such a transformation carries profound implications not only for the United States but for the architecture of the global monetary system.

The macroeconomic backdrop against which this transformation is unfolding is itself unusually volatile. The United States–Israel military campaign launched against Iran on February 28, 2026 triggered an immediate and severe energy supply shock: the closure of the Strait of Hormuz — through which approximately twenty percent of the world's traded oil flows — disrupted global petroleum markets in a manner that the International Energy Agency characterized as the greatest global energy security challenge in history. The consumer price index for May 2026 registered an annual rate of 4.2 percent, its highest level in more than three years. The PCE deflator — the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation measure — had reached 3.8 percent in April. Nine of eighteen FOMC participants projected that the federal funds rate would need to rise before the end of 2026, a dramatic reversal from the March consensus that had anticipated at least two rate cuts. The median dot plot now shows the federal funds rate ending 2026 at 3.8 percent, up 40 basis points from March projections.

Into this environment, Warsh has introduced not a clearer map but a deliberate reduction in the cartographic tools through which financial markets had previously navigated Federal Reserve intentions. The resulting challenge for G20 policymakers is both specific and systemic: the world's most influential central bank is simultaneously becoming more data-skeptical, less communicative, and more reliant upon structural judgments that are difficult for external observers to verify or anticipate.

The central question before the G20 is therefore not whether the Federal Reserve remains committed to price stability — Warsh was unambiguous: 'This committee will deliver price stability.' Rather, the question is whether the institution can preserve the global credibility it has accumulated over two decades while deliberately dismantling the transparency mechanisms through which that credibility has historically operated.



I.  The End of the Guidance Era: From Predictability to Strategic Ambiguity

The Architecture of Transparency

Since the Global Financial Crisis of 2008–2009, Federal Reserve policy has increasingly relied upon communication as a policy instrument in its own right. Under Chairs Ben Bernanke, Janet Yellen, and Jerome Powell, forward guidance evolved from an emergency tool into an essential component of the monetary transmission mechanism. Policymakers sought not merely to influence overnight rates but to shape the entire yield curve by anchoring expectations regarding the future path of rates across medium and long maturities.

Through policy statements, quarterly economic projections, the dot plot, and post-meeting press conferences, markets received increasingly detailed information regarding the Federal Reserve's likely reaction to future economic developments. This was not accidental. It reflected a deliberate institutional philosophy: that a credible and observable reaction function is itself a macroprudential asset. When markets could anticipate policy responses with reasonable confidence, the volatility generated by policy uncertainty was correspondingly reduced.

The legacy of this era is visible in the structure of global finance. Foreign central banks calibrated their own policy cycles to inferred Federal Reserve trajectories. Emerging-market sovereign issuers priced debt against expected U.S. dollar interest rate paths. Multinational corporations structured their balance sheets around the relatively predictable evolution of FOMC guidance. The dot plot — initially introduced in January 2012 under Chair Bernanke as a modest experiment in transparency — had become, by the Powell era, one of the most closely watched financial documents in the world.

The Warsh Departure

Chair Warsh's first meeting represents a deliberate departure from this framework at each of its principal nodes simultaneously.

On forward guidance, the departure was categorical. Warsh did not merely qualify or condition the statement — he eliminated it entirely. The FOMC's post-meeting statement was notably shorter, having dispensed, in Warsh's words, with 'some older language.' When pressed by journalists, he stated explicitly: 'We've dropped forward guidance.' He explained that some committee members felt guidance was unsuitable for the current conjuncture; others held it to be inappropriate as a general matter. The result — unanimity — masked what appears to be a principled division within the committee, one that Warsh has resolved, for now, in favor of silence.

"I don't want to prejudge the outcomes there, but I'm pretty open-minded about what they could be."

— Chair Kevin Warsh, FOMC Press Conference, June 17, 2026

On the dot plot, Warsh went further still. He declined to submit his own projection — the first Federal Reserve Chair to do so — stating that offering a personal interest-rate forecast would not be 'helpful in the conduct of policy.' Bill Adams, chief U.S. economist at Fifth Third Commercial Bank, observed that the dot plot consequently 'carries less weight than previous ones,' and characterized Warsh's abstention as a signal that 'he wants to steer the Fed away from all types of forward guidance, including the dot plot.' A formal year-end review of the Fed's entire communications architecture — encompassing the number of annual press conferences, the SEP, meeting minutes, transcripts, and the dot plot — was announced from the podium.

The practical implications are immediate and significant. For nearly two decades, financial markets have relied on Federal Reserve guidance to estimate future discount rates, price fixed-income securities, allocate capital internationally, and evaluate currency risk. By reducing the informational content of its communications, the Fed effectively transfers a far greater burden of uncertainty back to market participants. This represents a return to a model more closely resembling the discretionary central banking of the pre-Bernanke era, where participants inferred policy intentions primarily from observed actions rather than explicit commitments.

The resulting environment may improve policy flexibility — freeing the committee from commitments made under conditions that subsequently prove inaccurate — but it inevitably elevates uncertainty premiums across asset classes. The 2-year U.S. Treasury yield typically moves an average of negative 1.1 basis points at FOMC meetings; at a new chair's first meeting, historical data from Citi indicate the average sell-off is approximately 6 basis points. Warsh's June 17 press conference produced a reaction at the more volatile end of that range, with equities retreating and short-dated rates rising as markets absorbed the scope of the institutional transformation underway.


II.  The Transmission Paradox: Pursuing Price Stability Through Reduced Transparency

A central paradox emerged from the June 17 meeting — one that will define the intellectual terms of debate about the Warsh Federal Reserve for years to come.

Warsh repeatedly and emphatically declared that restoring and preserving price stability remains the Federal Reserve's foremost responsibility. His words were precise and unambiguous: 'Persistently high prices are a burden for the American people. The commitment to deliver is strong, unanimous, and unambiguous — and that's an important message we've missed for five years, and we're going to fix that.' He was equally clear about the 2 percent inflation target: 'That is the Federal Reserve's long-held objective. The two is the left of the decimal point. For now, zero is to the right.' He stated that any reconsideration of the target would follow — not precede — its achievement.

Yet the policy instruments traditionally used to anchor inflation expectations toward that 2 percent target are simultaneously being reconsidered, qualified, or weakened. Modern monetary economics places considerable weight on expectations as a transmission channel in their own right. Long-term inflation outcomes depend not merely on current policy rates but on public confidence — that of households, businesses, financial institutions, and foreign sovereigns — regarding future policy responses. The effectiveness of monetary policy therefore depends upon a credible and observable reaction function.

Instruments such as forward guidance, economic projections, press conferences, the dot plot, and explicit inflation-targeting frameworks served precisely this purpose: they made the reaction function observable. The emerging Warsh framework appears to prioritize flexibility over predictability. While such flexibility may allow policymakers to respond more effectively to rapidly changing structural conditions, it also increases uncertainty regarding future policy actions. Consequently, financial markets may require higher risk premiums to compensate for diminished visibility into the future path of monetary policy.

Claudia Sahm, chief economist at New Century Advisors and creator of the Sahm Rule for recession identification, gave the paradox perhaps its sharpest formulation: 'Saying you will deliver on price stability without explaining how you might do it is empty words. The Summary of Economic Projections has its flaws, but it is an exercise in what is the appropriate policy to achieve the dual mandate over the next few years.' From this perspective, the destruction of the communication architecture risks undermining the very credibility it is designed to serve.

The geopolitical context sharpens the paradox considerably. The inflation now confronting the committee is not a conventional demand-side overheat of the type that policy rate increases can readily address. The June CPI reading of 4.2 percent and the April PCE reading of 3.8 percent are driven in substantial part by energy prices: gasoline prices reached $4.50 per gallon by mid-May, with the average having stood at $2.98 on the eve of the February 28 military operations. Airlines — including Spirit Airlines, which ceased all operations in May citing fuel costs — have transmitted those energy shocks into airfares, and fertiliser-price pressures on food costs are expected to intensify through the second half of 2026. In this environment, using the blunt instrument of interest-rate increases risks raising borrowing costs for households already under pressure from an energy shock, without effectively addressing the supply-side origins of the inflation itself.

Ironically, therefore, achieving price stability may require accepting greater short-term instability in financial conditions. This is the fundamental transmission paradox now confronting the Federal Reserve — and the global economy.


III.  The Dot Plot Question and the Future of Monetary Signaling

An Instrument Under Review

The June 17 meeting may represent the beginning of the end for the dot plot as the world has known it.

Warsh has long criticized the practice of publishing individual rate forecasts, arguing during his April 2026 Senate Banking Committee confirmation hearing that 'the Fed tells the whole world what their dots are going to be, what their forecasts are going to be' — an exposure that he regarded as constraining rather than enabling effective policy. By declining to submit his own dot and announcing a comprehensive review of the SEP, he has opened a process whose outcome could range from modest reform to the abolition of the instrument itself.

The June dot plot itself, even in this weakened and incomplete form, generated significant market reaction. Nine of eighteen FOMC participants — with the Chair's own projection notably absent — projected that the federal funds rate would finish 2026 above its current range. The median forecast shifted to a single 25-basis-point hike, a dramatic reversal from the two projected cuts of March. The CME FedWatch tool registered a 60.7 percent probability of a rate increase at the October meeting following Warsh's press conference comments. The market moved meaningfully on a document that the Chair had simultaneously described as inadequate.

The Debate

The arguments on both sides of this debate are substantive and should be taken seriously by G20 policymakers monitoring Federal Reserve evolution.

Supporters of eliminating or substantially reforming the dot plot advance several arguments: economic forecasts are inherently uncertain; policymakers revise projections frequently and in ways that generate their own market volatility; markets often misinterpret projections as binding commitments rather than conditional estimates; and excessive numerical guidance may reduce the flexibility necessary to respond to structural developments that conventional models fail to capture. El-Erian and others have long argued that the Fed's guidance architecture has created excessive market dependence on central-bank communication, distorting price discovery in fixed-income markets.

Critics counter that eliminating projections creates a larger and more dangerous problem. Markets cannot function efficiently in an informational vacuum. The disappearance of explicit guidance may reduce errors by policymakers, but it simultaneously increases uncertainty for everyone else — households, businesses, foreign central banks, sovereign borrowers, and institutional investors. The result is unlikely to be less speculation; it is likely to be more speculation, based on incomplete and potentially inaccurate inference.

As American Banker observed, the recurring refrain of Warsh's forty-two-minute press conference — 'we have a task force for that' — encapsulated both the promise and the risk of the emerging era: institutional willingness to reconsider fundamental practices, combined with a corresponding deferral of clarity about what will replace them.

"For financial markets, that will mean dealing with a less communicative central bank."

— American Banker, June 17, 2026

For global investors, the practical consequence is already being absorbed: volatility becomes the new communication channel.

IV.  Institutional Reorganization and the Rise of Alternative Knowledge Networks

Five Task Forces and the Strategic Logic of Reform

One of the least discussed yet potentially most consequential announcements of the June 17 meeting was the creation of five distinct internal task forces, reviewing: Federal Reserve communications (including press conferences, the dot plot, meeting minutes, and transcripts); balance-sheet management and the appropriate level of system reserves; reliance on existing data sources and methodological reforms, including the potential adoption of alternative inflation measures such as trimmed-mean PCE; productivity and employment in the era of artificial intelligence; and the Fed's inflation framework, with Warsh clarifying that any reconsideration of the 2 percent target falls outside this review's scope.

At first reading, this initiative appears redundant. The Federal Reserve already operates one of the world's most sophisticated research infrastructures: the Board's Division of Research and Statistics, the research departments of twelve regional Reserve Banks, and an extensive network of academic consultants and visiting scholars. The analytical resources available to the institution are among the deepest in global central banking.

Yet from an institutional and epistemological perspective, the creation of these task forces serves several strategic objectives that transcend their surface redundancy.


Challenging Embedded Paradigms

The Fed's internal forecasting apparatus — most particularly the large-scale DSGE models central to the FRB/US framework — remains heavily influenced by New Keynesian macroeconomic assumptions developed during an era characterized by stable globalization, predictable supply chains, and persistently low inflation. The post-pandemic and now post-Iran-war economy increasingly challenges those assumptions at their foundations. 

Supply shocks transmitted through geopolitical disruption, structural changes in labour markets driven by artificial intelligence adoption, and the fragmentation of global supply chains into competing blocs represent phenomena that conventional econometric models were not designed to capture with speed or precision. Warsh appears intent on creating institutional channels through which competing analytical frameworks — drawing on private-sector data streams, real-time satellite and payments data, trimmed-mean inflation measures, and emerging AI-assisted analytical techniques — can formally influence policy deliberations alongside, or in competition with, staff consensus forecasts.

Rebalancing Internal Power

 The reform initiative may also alter the structural balance of influence between Board staff and FOMC voting members. Historically, consensus forecasts generated by staff economists have exercised substantial — some would say determinative — influence over policy discussions. The projection apparatus created the risk of institutional anchoring: policymakers defaulting toward staff consensus rather than exercising independent structural judgment. 

Alternative research structures, with their own analytical frameworks and direct reporting relationships to the Chair, create opportunities for dissenting perspectives to receive greater institutional legitimacy. Whether this enhances decision quality by broadening the evidential base, or fragments policy coherence by multiplying competing analytical signals, remains one of the central uncertainties of the Warsh era.


V.  The Epistemological Shift: Data Dependency Versus Structural Judgment

The most intellectually significant aspect of the June 17 meeting concerns not interest rates, and not even institutional architecture. It concerns knowledge itself — specifically, the question of what kinds of knowledge should govern monetary policy decisions in conditions of structural uncertainty.

Warsh repeatedly questioned the value of excessive reliance upon lagging indicators and emphasized the need to look beyond what backward-looking data alone can reveal. On data methodology, he stated: 'There are a lot of new data sources that we can learn from — the private sector, from reforms in the official sector, new analytic techniques that are far more refined than asking a simple question about whether something was core or noncore.'

This reflects a deeper philosophical debate within economics about the epistemological foundations of central banking. The dominant tradition since the Bernanke era rests upon empirical inference: policymakers collect data, estimate economic relationships, and calibrate policy responses accordingly. The models are explicit, their assumptions stated, and their projections subject to systematic revision as incoming data accumulate.

The emerging Warsh framework places greater weight on what might be called structural interpretation: the exercise of judgment about underlying economic reality that existing data cannot yet fully or accurately capture. The question asked is not 'What do the indicators say?' but 'What economic reality is emerging that the indicators are too slow or too imprecise to reveal?'

This approach offers genuine and significant advantages in an era of rapid structural change. Many of the most consequential developments now reshaping the U.S. and global economy — artificial intelligence-driven productivity shifts, demographic transitions, the reorganization of supply chains along geopolitical rather than efficiency-optimizing lines, the energy transition — are poorly measured by conventional economic statistics on any reasonable timescale. GDP revisions, payroll benchmark revisions, and PCE methodology adjustments regularly produce substantial retrospective changes to the picture of economic conditions that existed at the time decisions were made. If policymakers are systematically acting on data that are both lagged and subsequently revised, the case for supplementing empirical inference with structural judgment carries genuine analytical force.

However, the risks are equally substantial. Structural interpretations are inherently more subjective than observed data. They depend upon assumptions about economic mechanisms that are difficult to test in real time and easy to construct in ways that reflect prior convictions as much as empirical evidence. The history of central banking includes several episodes in which policymakers, confident in structural narratives about 'new economy' productivity or 'temporary' inflation, delayed necessary responses with costly consequences.

The June projections themselves underscore this risk. The FOMC raised its inflation forecasts substantially from March: year-end PCE inflation is now projected at approximately 3.6 percent, with core inflation around 3.3 percent, while growth expectations were revised downward. The hawkish shift in the dot plot — nine of eighteen members projecting a rate increase — reflects a growing institutional conviction that inflationary pressures are broader and more persistent than an energy shock alone would warrant. Should that judgment prove correct but the communication of it remain opaque, markets may reprice more abruptly than necessary. Should the judgment prove incorrect while the committee's reaction function remains invisible, the consequences for credibility could be severe.


VI.  The Institutional Independence Dimension

Any assessment of the Federal Reserve's trajectory under Chair Warsh is incomplete without acknowledging the extraordinary external pressures on the institution's independence that have characterized 2026 to date — pressures that constitute the most direct challenge to Fed autonomy in the modern era.

President Trump nominated Warsh in January 2026, having publicly stated that he would only appoint a Fed Chair who agreed with him on interest rate cuts. The geopolitical dynamics of the Iran war subsequently changed the equation: rising energy inflation made the case for rate cuts untenable, and Trump shifted his position to opposing rate increases. On the Sunday before the June 17 meeting, the President praised Warsh on Meet the Press while stressing there was 'no reason' to raise rates. Warsh's insistence at the June 17 press conference that the committee's commitment to price stability was 'strong, unanimous, and unambiguous' — and his refusal to accommodate the political preference for rate cuts — represented a notable early assertion of institutional independence, albeit within the framework of a rate-hold rather than a rate-change decision.

The independence question operates along a second and more structurally significant axis. The case of Trump v. Cook — involving the President's attempt to remove Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook, who was denied removal despite uncharged allegations of mortgage fraud — has reached the U.S. Supreme Court, which heard oral arguments in January 2026 and is expected to issue a ruling before the end of its term. Multiple conservative justices expressed deep skepticism about the administration's position. Justice Kavanaugh stated that the government's argument would 'weaken, if not shatter, the independence of the Federal Reserve.' The brief submitted by all three surviving former Federal Reserve Chairs — Alan Greenspan, Ben Bernanke, and Janet Yellen — argued that Congress had 'intentionally' designed the Fed as a uniquely independent entity, largely insulated from political pressures. The ruling, expected imminently, will have long-term structural consequences for the constitutional architecture of central bank independence.

Against this backdrop, former Chair Jerome Powell's decision to remain on the Board of Governors after his chairmanship expired — with his governor's term running to 2028 — introduces an additional institutional complexity. Powell has pledged to keep a low profile and not compete with the new chairman; each holds one vote on FOMC interest-rate decisions. The Federal Reserve's renovation scandal, in which the U.S. Attorney's office opened an investigation into Powell's oversight of a multibillion-dollar headquarters renovation — which Powell attributed to political retaliation for the Fed's rate-hold stance — adds a further dimension of institutional turbulence.

G20 finance ministries monitoring Federal Reserve evolution should treat the credibility of the institution's independence as a variable rather than a constant for planning purposes.


VII.  Implications for the International Monetary System

The implications of the Warsh transition extend far beyond the boundaries of the United States economy.

For much of the post-2008 period, global financial markets operated within a highly transparent U.S.-centric monetary environment. Foreign central banks could interpret Federal Reserve communications with reasonable confidence, anticipate policy shifts months in advance, and calibrate their own policies and reserve management accordingly. The synchronized communication model that emerged from the Bernanke era — in which the Fed's reaction function was largely observable — served as an organizing framework for the global monetary system. That environment may now be ending.


Greater Dollar Volatility

Reduced forward guidance will likely increase the sensitivity of the U.S. dollar to economic data releases, inflation reports, and labor-market prints. In the absence of explicit guidance anchoring expectations, each incoming data point acquires greater market-moving potential — the dollar may exhibit larger and more frequent directional swings as markets repeatedly reprice uncertain policy expectations. The current inflationary context, in which the Iran-war energy shock complicates clean inferences about underlying price dynamics, amplifies this mechanism.

More Independent Monetary Cycles

The traditional synchronization between major central banks may weaken materially. The European Central Bank, responding to its own inflationary pressures — with EU inflation projected between 2.6 and 4.4 percent for 2026 depending on conflict duration, and UK inflation expected to breach 5 percent — postponed its planned rate reductions following the March energy shock and has issued warnings about stagflation in energy-dependent European economies including Germany and Italy. The Bank of Japan continues to navigate its own structural transition away from yield curve control. These institutions will increasingly need to formulate policy based primarily on domestic conditions rather than inferred Federal Reserve trajectories, complicating the international policy coordination that has underpinned financial stability since 2008.

Increased Capital-Flow Volatility

Emerging-market economies remain particularly vulnerable to greater uncertainty in U.S. monetary signaling. Higher and more volatile U.S. interest rate expectations typically translate into more volatile portfolio capital flows, elevated refinancing costs for dollar-denominated sovereign and corporate debt, and heightened exchange-rate instability. Countries with substantial dollar-denominated liabilities — across Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa, and Southeast Asia — may face renewed financial stress if Fed opacity generates repeated sharp repricing of the dollar funding environment. This risk is compounded by the supply-chain disruptions and fertiliser-price increases flowing from the Iran war, which are creating independent inflationary pressures across import-dependent developing economies.

The Global Reserve Currency Premium

There is a deeper structural question that the Warsh transition raises for the international monetary system: to what extent does the dollar's reserve-currency premium depend upon the predictability of Federal Reserve policy? The willingness of foreign central banks, sovereign wealth funds, and institutional investors to hold dollar-denominated assets at rates below those demanded for comparable non-dollar instruments reflects, in part, a confidence premium attached to Federal Reserve transparency and credibility. If that transparency diminishes materially, the demand for dollar-denominated assets at existing spreads may ultimately face downward pressure, with consequences for U.S. borrowing costs and the international monetary system's current U.S.-centric architecture.

VIII.  Strategic Recommendations for the G20

In preparation for the November 2026 G20 Leaders' Summit in New Delhi, finance ministers and central bank governors should consider the following strategic priorities.

1.  Strengthen Foreign-Exchange Contingency Planning

Reserve managers should prepare for a structurally more volatile dollar environment arising from reduced Fed transparency. Currency reserve portfolios, intervention frameworks, and swap-line arrangements should be reviewed in light of the possibility that dollar volatility may be episodically elevated at data release points and FOMC meeting dates for an extended period.

2.  Expand Cross-Central-Bank Information Sharing

Greater uncertainty regarding U.S. policy increases the marginal value of enhanced direct communication among major monetary authorities. The G20's Financial Stability Board and the BIS should consider strengthening real-time information-sharing mechanisms that allow non-U.S. central banks to calibrate domestic policy more effectively in the absence of explicit Federal Reserve guidance.

3.  Monitor the Federal Reserve Independence Dimension

The combination of communications reform, institutional restructuring, the pending Supreme Court ruling in Trump v. Cook, the political context of the Warsh appointment, and the ongoing Powell renovation investigation warrants close and sustained attention. The credibility of the Federal Reserve's independence from political interference remains one of the world's most important financial public goods; G20 finance ministries should treat any deterioration of that credibility as a systemic risk requiring multilateral response.

4.  Enhance Surveillance of Global Liquidity Conditions

Multilateral institutions — most particularly the International Monetary Fund and the Bank for International Settlements — should intensify their monitoring of dollar funding markets, cross-border capital flows, and global liquidity conditions. The confluence of elevated U.S. inflation, a hawkish dot-plot shift, and reduced Fed communication transparency creates conditions under which dollar funding stress could develop with less advance warning than has been available in prior cycles.

5.  Develop Robust Alternative Global Risk Scenarios

Policy planners should evaluate not only conventional inflation and recession scenarios but also the possibility of communication-induced market volatility arising from uncertainty surrounding the Federal Reserve's evolving and as-yet-unstated reaction function. The scenario in which the Fed is simultaneously tightening and reducing transparency — while the international community lacks the guidance infrastructure to anticipate its next move — deserves explicit stress-testing in G20 vulnerability assessments.

6.  Monitor Energy Market Normalization and Its Monetary Implications

News of a looming peace settlement between the United States and Iran and the potential reopening of the Strait of Hormuz drove oil prices to a three-month low in the days preceding the June 17 meeting. However, energy analysts warn that even after the strait reopens, supply-chain bottlenecks, production halts, and depleted stockpiles mean energy prices for consumers may take months to return toward prewar levels. G20 energy and finance ministers should coordinate closely on the sequencing of energy market normalization and its monetary policy implications across member economies.


IX. Conclusion

The June 17, 2026 FOMC meeting may ultimately mark the beginning of a new era in central banking — not merely American central banking, but the global institution that American central banking has shaped for the past quarter century.

Kevin Warsh has not merely inherited the Federal Reserve. He appears determined to redefine how it understands information, communicates with markets, exercises monetary authority, and organizes its own analytical apparatus. The shift underway is not simply procedural or stylistic but epistemological: it concerns the fundamental question of how policymakers distinguish between signal and noise in an economy that is simultaneously more structurally complex, more geopolitically exposed, and more difficult to measure accurately than at any point in the post-war era.

Whether this experiment ultimately strengthens or weakens monetary governance remains genuinely uncertain. Greater flexibility may improve the Federal Reserve's responsiveness to structural change that conventional models cannot capture. The recognition that backward-looking data may systematically mislead in periods of rapid transformation reflects a serious and defensible analytical insight. But reduced transparency risks undermining one of the Federal Reserve's most valuable and non-reproducible assets: the credibility derived from a predictable and observable reaction function, built over two decades of institutional discipline and accumulated public trust.

For the G20, the strategic challenge is both specific and enduring. The issue is no longer whether the Federal Reserve will shape the global financial system — it inevitably will, as it has for the entirety of the postwar order. The question is whether the world's monetary authorities can successfully adapt to a Federal Reserve that is becoming less predictable precisely when global economic uncertainty is becoming more profound.

The Warsh era at the Federal Reserve has begun. Its defining characteristics — structural judgment over empirical inference, institutional flexibility over communicative predictability, regime change over continuity — will demand, and reward, close and sustained attention.



Sources and Institutional References

This memorandum draws upon contemporaneous reporting and analysis from the following sources as of June 17, 2026: Federal Reserve Board press release and Summary of Economic Projections (June 17, 2026); Chair Kevin Warsh post-meeting press conference transcript (CNBC, The Hill, American Banker, Spectrum News, June 17, 2026); Federal Reserve communications review announcement (Reuters, The Hill); Kiplinger FOMC live coverage and Duke University survey of former Fed officials (June 2026); NPR, CBS News, and Al Jazeera reporting on the June 17 FOMC decision; Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Working Paper on the 2026 Iran war and U.S. inflation (Kilian, Plante, Richter, Zhou, April 2026); Al Jazeera economic impact reporting on the Iran war fuel crisis (May–June 2026); Supreme Court oral arguments in Trump v. Cook (CNBC, SCOTUSblog, CNN, January 21, 2026); Investing.com expert reaction roundup (June 17, 2026); International Energy Agency characterization of the Hormuz disruption.