Economy | Europe
The Country That Is Most Likely to Default First If Oil Stays Above $100
Oil above $100 per barrel hits some countries far harder than others. Here is the analysis of which economies are most at risk of debt distress if high energy prices persist.
Oil above $100 per barrel hits some countries far harder than others. Here is the analysis of which economies are most at risk of debt distress if high energy prices persist.
- Oil above $100 per barrel hits some countries far harder than others.
- When oil prices rise sharply, the economic impact is not uniformly distributed.
- The European economies in this risk category are generally not the major economies — Germany, France, and Italy have deep financial systems and significant fiscal capacity.
Oil above $100 per barrel hits some countries far harder than others.
When oil prices rise sharply, the economic impact is not uniformly distributed. For oil-exporting nations, high prices are a windfall. For oil-importing nations without domestic production, high prices are a tax — paid to exporters, reducing the income available for everything else. For the most exposed oil-importing economies, the combination of existing debt levels, limited fiscal space, and inadequate foreign exchange reserves creates conditions that can tip from 'managed difficulty' to 'debt crisis' in a matter of months.
The European economies in this risk category are generally not the major economies — Germany, France, and Italy have deep financial systems and significant fiscal capacity. The exposed European economies are the smaller, more indebted states: Greece (despite its impressive recovery, still carrying elevated debt), Portugal (high external debt, significant energy import dependence), and several Central and Eastern European states whose post-2022 energy transition has been costly and incomplete.
Outside Europe, the sovereign debt distress risk from sustained $100+ oil prices falls most acutely on a specific group: heavily indebted oil-importing developing countries in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Central America that were already on the edge of debt distress before the current crisis. Sri Lanka's 2022 default was an early indication of this vulnerability; Ghana's restructuring, Zambia's restructuring, and Egypt's IMF-supported stabilisation programme are other examples of the trajectory that high commodity prices accelerate.
IMF research from the 2022 energy crisis provides the relevant historical comparison: a 50 percent increase in oil prices sustained for 18 months was associated with an approximately 40 percent increase in sovereign default probability for the most exposed low-income country group. The current oil price increase is similar in magnitude; the duration beyond the initial spike is the variable that determines whether it produces financial distress or resolves before the debt dynamics become self-reinforcing.