World trade growth in 2013 and 2014 is likely to be slower than previously forecast.
World Trade Organisation (WTO) economists now predict 2013 growth of 2.5 per cent – down from the 3.3 peer cent forecast in April – and 4.5 per cent in 2014 – down from five per cent – but they say conditions for improved trade are gradually falling into place.
The demand for imports in developing economies is reviving but at a slower rate than expected. It hindered the growth of exports from both developed and developing countries in the first half of 2013 and was the reason for the lower forecasts, they said.
“There is a message for the WTO in it,” the global trade regime director general Roberto Azevêdo said, adding that the past two years of sluggish trade growth reinforce the need to make progress in the multilateral negotiations. “Although the trade slowdown was mostly caused by adverse macro‑economic shocks, there are strong indications that protectionism has also played a part and is now taking new forms which are harder to detect.”
“Fortunately, there is something we can do about this,” he said. “Negotiations under way in Geneva can address these problems, facilitating greater trade and opportunities to spur economic growth.”
“I am encouraged at the level of commitment shown by WTO members,” Azevêdo said, adding, “But much hard work remains in the coming weeks if we are to deliver a successful outcome at the ministerial conference in Bali.”
Some short-term prospects are improving with encouraging data coming from Europe, the US, Japan and China.
Reports on private sector activities from purchasing managers – purchasing managers’ indices, which give some indication about future activity – shipping rates, automobile production and other leading indicators, suggest that the economic slowdown has bottomed out and that a tentative recovery is underway. “It is expected to be reflected in rising quarterly growth in the months ahead,” WTO economists said.
The European sovereign debt crisis has eased significantly since last year, unemployment in the US has fallen to 7.3 per cent from a post-crisis high of 10 per cent, and growth of gross domestic product (GDP) – a measure of a country’s output – in Japan has accelerated since the adoption of new fiscal and monetary policies.
Although large developing economies have slowed appreciably in recent months, the latest figures from China on industrial production suggest that the country may be regaining some of its dynamism. On the other hand, India’s economy is still in the midst of a sharp contraction according to composite leading indicators calculated by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
However, since the European Union (EU) consumes roughly one third of the world’s traded goods – including shipments between member countries within the EU – and the EU unemployment rate is likely to remain at or near record levels for some time, growth in trade can be expected to be below average — that is, below the 20-year average of 5.4 per cent — in the coming quarters.