Iran's closure of the Strait of Hormuz is a classic stagflation shock: higher oil prices push inflation
up while simultaneously slowing growth, and the "every $10" rule-of-thumb helps quantify that
effect.
[1][3][9][10]
How the oil–inflation–GDP math works
Using the rule-of-thumb (consistent with SBI Research estimates):[9]
- Every $10 rise in oil → about 40 bps (0.40 percentage point)
higher inflation.[9]
- Every $10 rise in oil → about 10–20 bps hit to GDP
growth (SBI cites 20–25 bps for India; 10 bps is a slightly milder version of the same
logic).[9]
Scenario: Brent $70 → $100 (A $30 Move)
This "direct math" is a short-run, rule-of-thumb estimate that assumes:[9]
- The oil shock persists for more than a brief spike.
- Central banks don't fully offset it immediately with policy.
- The economy is materially exposed to imported oil and fuel.
Why closing the Strait of Hormuz matters
Iranian officials explicitly warned "not a litre of oil" will pass through the Strait. Brent has
already surged toward $100–$120 as flows slow and markets price in prolonged
disruption.[2][3]
$200+
Iran's Price Threat
Because energy is a key input for transportation, manufacturing, and agriculture, higher oil and gas prices
quickly feed into the prices of many goods and services, creating cost-push
inflation.[7][10][9]
How this creates stagflation risk
The Stagflation Equation
↑
Inflation
Firms pass on fuel & input costs
+
↓
Growth
Real incomes squeezed, spending drops
= Stagflation
In this scenario:[10][7][9]
Stagflation Transmission
Channel 1
Firms pass on fuel & shipping costs
Channel 2
Real incomes squeezed, spending drops
Channel 3
Trade balances worsen, currencies weaken
Channel 4
Second-round imported inflation
Why markets are spooked
🏦
Central Bank Dilemma
Tightening to fight inflation risks deepening the slowdown, but staying loose risks entrenching
higher inflation.
[7][10]
📉
Margin Squeeze
Corporate margins get pressured from both sides: weaker demand and higher input costs at the same
time.
⚡
Risk Asset Repricing
Equities, high-yield credit, and EM FX tend to re-price quickly when stagflation odds rise.
Back-of-the-envelope application
Investor Scenario Calculator
If oil settles
$30–$40 above prior levels for a sustained period and the "every $10"
rule holds approximately for the economy:
[9]
+1.2–1.6pp
More Inflation Than Forecast
−0.3–0.4pp
Lower GDP Growth
That is exactly the kind of stagflationary shock Malik is describing: a mechanical link from the oil
spike caused by the Strait of Hormuz closure to higher inflation and weaker growth, which naturally
rattles markets.
Malik — Stagflation Transmission
⁂