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WTO cuts 2023 global trade growth forecast to 1.0pc

The trade body says trade could contract if Ukraine war worsens; its chief urges countries to avoid export curbs


| Updated: October 07, 2022 09:02:19


Containers are shown staked-up at the Port of Long Beach as supply chain problem continue from Long Beach in California of the United States on November 22 last year –Reuters file photo Containers are shown staked-up at the Port of Long Beach as supply chain problem continue from Long Beach in California of the United States on November 22 last year –Reuters file photo

The World Trade Organization forecast a slowdown in global trade growth next year as sharply higher energy and food prices and rising interest rates curb import demand, and warned of a possible contraction if the war in Ukraine worsens.

The Geneva-based trade body said on Wednesday that merchandise trade would increase by 3.5 per cent this year, up from its April estimate of 3.0 per cent. However, for 2023, it sees trade growth of just 1.0 per cent, compared with a previous forecast of 3.4 per cent, according to Reuters.

The WTO said there was high uncertainty over its forecasts. It provided a band of trade growth expansion of 2.0 per cent to 4.9 per cent for this year and of -2.8 per cent to 4.6 per cent for 2023.

"The picture for 2023 has darkened considerably," WTO director-general Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told a news conference, adding that risks for next year's forecast were more on the downside.

"If the war in Ukraine worsens, rather than gets better, that's going to have a huge impact," she said.

Weather events hitting food-producing regions or damaging energy export infrastructure could further hit trade growth, along with weakness in China, where COVID-19 outbreaks have disrupted production.

She said the world needed a more diversified and less concentrated base for the production of goods and services, which should boost growth, increase resilience and promote long-term price stability by mitigating exposure to extreme weather events and local disruptions.

She also warned against the "tempting response" to resort to trade restrictions, saying curbs imposed by various countries on food and fertiliser exports had dropped from 57 to 42 in the past month, but then rose back to 53 due to new measures.

"These would only deepen inflationary pressures and reduce living standards and would likely make us more rather than less vulnerable to the crisis we are grappling with," she told a news conference.

The WTO's forecast does not cover services, but the WTO said tourist arrivals were likely to fall after tripling in the first seven months of 2022. Lower shipping rates, it said, might have been greeted before as a sign of supply chains improvements, but was probably more the result of cooling demand.

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