The bank pointed to OPEC's plan for a production quota to limit a global glut of supply.
"We expect a solid rise in energy prices, led by oil, next year," Senior Economist John Baffes said in the World Bank's Commodity Markets Outlook.
"However, there is considerable uncertainty around the outlook as we await the details and the implementation of the OPEC agreement, which, if carried through, will undoubtedly impact oil markets," according to Baffes, who is also the lead author of the Outlook.
Due to oversupply and low global demand,
OPEC refused to interfere in the oil market but finally announced last month that it would limit output, in coordination with other major producers such as Russia.
The economics of OPEC members, and
"Low commodity prices hit commodity-exporting emerging and developing economies hard but now appear to have bottomed out,” Ayhan Kose, Director of the World Bank’s Development Prospects Group, said in the Outlook.
"Growth in this group of economies is expected to be near zero for the year," he added.
The World Bank left its average
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