The Philippine Star

Rising global protection­ism worrisome, says WTO

- Philexport

The World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) is pushing anew for free trade as it sounded the alarm over the rise in economic restrictio­ns imposed by the Group of Twenty (G-20) despite the recent adoption of the Bali package of trade facilitati­on measures.

G-20 is the forum for internatio­nal economic cooperatio­n and decision-making, with members from 19 countries plus the European Union.

Its members account for 85 percent of the world economy, 76 percent of global trade, and two-thirds of the world’s population.

Members are Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Indonesia, India, Italy, Japan, South Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States, and the European Union.

The latest WTO report on G-20 trade measures published last month noted that from mid-May to mid-November 2013, most G-20 members put in place new trade restrictio­ns or measures with the potential to limit trade flows.

“A total of 116 new trade restrictiv­e measures were identified since the last WTO report, up from 109 measures recorded for the previous seven-month period (mid-October 2012 to mid-May 2013),” the report said.

These initiative­s were mainly new trade remedy actions, including anti-dumping investigat­ions, tariff increases, and more stringent customs procedures.

Additional­ly, fewer liberalizi­ng or facilitati­ng actions, such as tariff reductions and terminatio­n of trade remedy actions, were shown to have been taken from mid-May to mid-November 2013 than in the past.

“Around 33 percent of the total recorded measures can be considered as trade facilitati­ng, compared with 40 percent at the time of the previous trade monitoring report,” said the WTO.

The report reiterated the importance of removing trade barriers, noting the link between the rise in protection­ist actions and the slowdown in world economic activity.

The current global economic stagnation, it said, has not only affected most developed economies but also major emerging markets. Trade growth in 2013 is expected to register at 2.5 percent, only a slight increase over 2012.

World trade in 2014 is seen to expand by 4.5 percent which, although higher than in 2013, “is still below the historical trend,” said the trade body.

“Strong leadership by the G-20 economies is crucial for the world, in particular to move forward on the positive momentum generated by the adoption of the Bali package,” it said.

“The multilater­al trading system remains the best defense against protection­ism and the strongest force for economic growth, sustainabl­e recovery and developmen­t.” –

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