How are Spain’s economic sectors exposed to the Iran war shock?

After a 2025 marked by uncertainty around trade policy, in 2026, the conflict in Iran has emerged as the main source of risk for the global economy. We analyse the exposure channels of Spain’s various economic sectors to this shock. We focus on four transmission channels: the rising cost of fossil fuels, global trade tensions, direct supply risks stemming from the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, and the potential tightening of financial conditions.

European households’ well-being: greater reliance on public support amid higher inflation

Between 2013 and 2019, the recovery that followed the financial and sovereign debt crises enabled gradual but sustained improvements in household purchasing power, supported by an improvement in employment and a contained inflation environment. The pandemic disrupted this dynamic, and while nominal income and the labour market showed resilience, the inflation shock exacerbated by the invasion of Ukraine eroded purchasing power and strained households’ well-being, hitting low-income households particularly hard. In this context, real actual individual consumption per capita – a broad indicator of material well-being that includes both private expenditure and individual goods and services provided by the public sector – allows us to analyse how the living conditions of European households have evolved before and after the pandemic, as well as the role of public redistribution.