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WTO: Expect Slow Global Trade Growth For 2013

Compiled by staff 
Published: Sep 21, 2012

Slowing global output growth has led WTO economists to downgrade their 2012 forecast for world trade expansion to 2.5% from 3.7% and to scale back their 2013 estimate to 4.5% from 5.6%.

"In an increasingly interdependent world, economic shocks in one region can quickly spread to others. Recently announced measures to reinforce the euro and boost growth in the United States are therefore extremely welcome," said WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy.

"But more needs to be done. We need a renewed commitment to revitalize the multilateral trading system which can restore economic certainty at a time when it is badly needed. The last thing the world economy needs right now is the threat of rising protectionism," he said.

The global economy has encountered increasingly strong headwinds since the last WTO Secretariat forecast was issued in April. Output and employment data in the United States have continued to disappoint, while purchasing managers' indices and industrial production figures in China point to slower growth in the world's largest exporter.

More importantly, the European sovereign debt crisis has not abated, making fiscal adjustment in the peripheral euro area economies more painful and stoking volatility. Figures for world trade include trade between EU countries (i.e. EU intra-trade), making them highly sensitive to developments in this region.

All of these factors have contributed to an easing of global trade growth, which slowed to a crawl in the second quarter according to new quarterly merchandise trade volume statistics compiled by the WTO.

WTO: Expect Slow Global Trade Growth For 2013

The volume of world trade as measured by the average of exports and imports only managed to grow 0.3% in the second quarter compared to the first, or 1.2% at an annualized rate.

The trade slowdown in the first half of 2012 was driven by an even stronger deceleration in imports of developed countries and by a corresponding weakness in the exports of developing economies, which for the purposes of this analysis includes the Commonwealth of Independent States.

WTO: Expect Slow Global Trade Growth For 2013

The WTO now expects world merchandise trade volume to grow by 2.5% in 2012 (down from 3.7% in April). On the export side, we anticipate a 1.5% increase in developed economies' trade (down from 2%) and a 3.5% expansion for developing countries (down from 5.6%). On the import side, we foresee nearly stagnant growth of 0.4% in developed economies (down sharply from 1.9%) and a more robust 5.4% increase in developing countries (down from 6.2%).

The WTO's short-term trade statistics now include quarterly merchandise trade growth in volume (or real) terms. This is a new addition to the WTO's quarterly trade data, which were previously only available as values in current dollar terms.

Trade value data do not take inflation and exchange rate changes into account, whereas volume figures do. This can be useful when looking at changes over a period.

This new dataset, which includes both seasonally adjusted and non-seasonally adjusted series for selected countries and regions, has been prepared using methods devised in co-operation with the UN Conference on Trade and Development.

Figures for 2013 are provisional estimates based on strong assumptions about medium-term economic developments, including a) that current policy measures will be sufficient to avert a breakup of the euro, and b) an agreement will be reached to stabilize public finances in the United States, thereby avoiding automatic spending cuts and tax increases early next year. Failure of these and other assumptions could derail the latest projections.

As a result, these figures should be interpreted with caution. Based on current information, the WTO expects trade growth to rebound to 4.5% in 2013. Exports of developed and developing economies should increase by 3.3% and 5.7%, respectively, while imports of developed and developing countries should advance 3.4% and 6.1%.

Although developed countries collectively recorded modest increases in both exports and imports in 2012, some grew faster than others. Exports of the United States and shipments from the EU to the rest of the world (i.e. extra-EU exports) grew steadily over the past year, with year-on-year increases of around 7% and 5%, respectively, in the second quarter.

Japanese exports have been mostly flat since mid-2010, but even they recorded an 8.5% year-on-year increase in the second quarter. Imports of the United States and Japan have also held up relatively well despite the crisis, with year-on-year growth of roughly 5% and 6% in the latest period.

However, import demand in the European Union has weakened significantly, resulting in less trade between EU countries (intra-trade down3.5% year-on-year in the second quarter) and fewer imports from the rest of the world (also down 3.5%). The weight of the EU in total world trade (around 35% on both the export and import sides in 2011, including EU-intra trade), combined with the larger-than-expected year-on-year drop in EU imports through the first half of 2012, explains much of the downward revision to the forecast. The EU also represents nearly 60% of developed economies' imports, which accounts for the stagnation in projected imports of developed economies in 2012.



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