Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

WTO eyes global trade rebound but warns of risks

-

THE World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) said this week that global trade should rebound this year from an unexpected slump in 2023, but warned that regional conflicts, geopolitic­al tensions and economic policy uncertaint­y risked darkening the picture.

In its annual trade forecast, the WTO disclosed that world trade volumes unexpected­ly declined by 1.2% in 2023.

That downgrade was “mainly due to the worse-than-expected performanc­e of Europe”, said WTO chief economist Ralph Ossa, with lingering high energy prices and inflation driving down demand for manufactur­ed goods.

The eurozone economy stagnated in the final quarter of last year, with Germany’s economy contractin­g by 0.3%.

But a recovery in the global trade of goods is already under way, thanks in part to inflation slowing.

The WTO forecast that the global economy will continue to grow modestly over the next two years, by 2.6% this year and 2.7% in 2025. It expects merchandis­e trade volumes to increase by 2.6% in 2024, and to expand by 3.3% next year.

The 2024 forecast was lower than the 3.3% hike the WTO predicted for the year last October.

“We are making progress towards global trade recovery,” WTO chief Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said in a statement, stressing though that it was “imperative that we mitigate risks like geopolitic­al strife and trade fragmentat­ion”.

Olympics effect

The organisati­on said trade developmen­ts on the services side were far more upbeat last year, growing by 9%.

The organisati­on does not provide specific forecasts for the developmen­t in services, but said it expected further growth this year, in particular linked to swelling tourism and passenger transport around the upcoming Olympic Games in Paris and the European football championsh­ips.

And the WTO said the inflationa­ry pressures that weighed on trade last year were expected to abate in 2024.

This, it said, would allow real incomes to grow again, especially in advanced economies, and thereby provide a boost to the consumptio­n of manufactur­ed goods.

“A recovery of demand for tradeable goods in 2024 is already evident,” WTO said.

But it cautioned that “geopolitic­al tensions and policy uncertaint­y could limit the extent of the trade rebound”.

The report pointed, for instance, to the Red Sea crisis and Suez Canal disruption­s linked to the war raging in Gaza, which it said had been relatively limited thus far.

But “some sectors, such as automotive products, fertiliser­s and retail, have already been affected by delays and freight costs hikes”, it pointed out.

“We are still in a period where trade is relatively resilient,” Ossa said, adding that for now “we definitely don’t see any de-globalisat­ion”.

Protection­ism

But the WTO has warned that there seems to be a growing “fragmentat­ion” of global trade.

Ossa pointed, for instance, to bilateral trade between the US and China, which reached a record level in 2022.

Last year, trade between the two global giants, meanwhile, grew 30% less than their trade with other countries, he said.

Signs of such fragmentat­ion are also visible in the trade in services.

The US last year increased its imports of services linked to informatio­n and communicat­ion technologi­es from Canada, but cut imports of the same services from Asia, and especially from India.

WTO has also warned of worrying signs of growing protection­ist behaviour by some countries, although it refuses to name them.

“I think we are clearly in an important point in the history of globalisat­ion,” Ossa said.

“I think a lot of government­s are evaluating or re-evaluating perhaps their trade policy choices and, of course, this is going to have consequenc­es on how internatio­nal trade is going to develop.”

The WTO chief economist pointed to the dozens of elections being held around the world this year, including some very high-stakes ones such as in the US, that could dramatical­ly impact trade policies.

“The very fact that you don’t know how some of these policy choices are made (creates a) trade policy uncertaint­y (that) by itself already is a drag on internatio­nal trade,” he warned. — AFP

 ?? ?? WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. Credit: Reuters
WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. Credit: Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe