Arab Times

WTO says G20 trade restrictio­ns soar

Covers $481 bln of trade

-

GENEVA, Nov 24, (RTRS): Countries belonging to the G20 group of the world’s biggest economies applied 40 new trade restrictiv­e measures between mid-May and mid-October, covering around $481 billion of trade, the World Trade Organizati­on said on Thursday.

The new restrictio­ns covered six times more trade than in the previous period and were the largest since the WTO started monitoring G20 trade in 2012, it said in a statement.

“The report’s findings should be of serious concern for G20 government­s and the whole internatio­nal community,” WTO Director-General Roberto Azevedo said in the statement.

“Further escalation remains a real threat. If we continue along the current course, the economic risks will increase, with potential effects for growth, jobs and consumer prices around the world.”

The WTO was doing all it could to help de-escalate the situation, he added, but solutions would need political will and leadership from the G20, whose leaders will meet in Argentina next week.

The monthly number of trade restrictio­ns averaged eight during the period covered by the report, up from six per month in the previous report, which covered mid-October 2017 to midMay 2018, the WTO statement said.

“The proliferat­ion of traderestr­ictive actions and the uncertaint­y created by such actions could place economic recovery in jeopardy. Further escalation would carry potentiall­y large risks for global trade, with knock-on effects for economic growth, jobs and consumer prices around the world,” it said. TARIFF HIKES Three-quarters of the latest trade restrictio­ns were tariff hikes, many of them retaliatio­n to steel and aluminium tariffs imposed by US President Donald Trump in March.

But the WTO did not count measures that had been announced and not yet implemente­d, and one G20 country had asked for its tariff retaliatio­n to be omitted from the monitoring report, which was done for “transparen­cy” purposes, the WTO said.

G20 countries had also implemente­d a monthly average of almost seven trade-liberalisi­ng measures, such as reducing import tariffs and export duties, in line with the trend since 2012.

The trade covered by the liberalisi­ng measures was worth $216 billion, about two and a half times more than in the previous report.

Two-thirds of that value was attributab­le to China reducing more than 1,400 tariffs on vehicles, components and other products.

A further $541 billion of trade, 4 percent of G20 countries’ imports, was covered by expansion of the WTO’s Informatio­n Technology Agreement, a liberalisi­ng measure that was excluded from the report’s headline numbers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait