TWN
Info Service on WTO and Trade Issues (Oct15/05)
6 October 2015
Third World Network
WTO revises downward its trade growth forecast for this year
Published in SUNS #8103 dated 1 October 2015
Geneva, 30 Sep (Kanaga Raja) -- World merchandise trade in volume
terms is now forecast to grow at 2.8% in 2015, down from the previous
estimate of 3.3% made in April, economists at the World Trade Organisation
(WTO) said on Wednesday.
In a press release highlighting the latest trends in world trade growth,
the economists also lowered their forecast for trade growth in 2016
to 3.9%, down slightly from the previous estimate of 4.0% also made
in April.
They said that these revisions reflect a number of factors that weighed
on the global economy in the first half of 2015, including falling
import demand in China, Brazil and other emerging economies; falling
prices for oil and other primary commodities; and significant exchange
rate fluctuations.
"Volatility in financial markets, uncertainty over the changing
stance of monetary policy in the United States and mixed recent economic
data have clouded the outlook for the world economy and trade in the
second half of the year and beyond."
If current projections are realised, 2015 will mark the fourth consecutive
year in which annual trade growth has fallen below 3% and the fourth
year where trade has grown at roughly the same rate as world GDP,
rather than twice as fast, as was the case in the 1990s and early
2000s.
The press release noted that global output is still expanding at a
moderate pace but risks to the world economy are increasingly on the
downside.
"These include a sharper-than-expected slowdown in emerging and
developing economies, the possibility of destabilizing financial flows
from an eventual interest rate rise by the US Federal Reserve, and
unanticipated costs associated with the migration crisis in Europe."
The WTO economists said that at the time of their last forecast in
April 2015, world trade and output appeared to be strengthening based
on available data through 2014 Q4.
However, results for the first half of 2015 were below expectations
as quarterly growth turned negative, averaging -0.7% in Q1 and Q2.
Despite the quarterly declines in the first half of 2015, year-on-year
growth in trade for the year to date remains positive at 2.3%.
Quarterly export growth of developed economies was essentially flat
in the first two quarters of 2015 (-0.2% on average in Q1 and Q2),
but those of developing countries were more negative (-1.9%).
The drop in exports was driven by weaker developing countries' imports
(-2.2%) and stagnation in developed countries' imports (+0.1%).
The WTO economists said trade growth remains uneven across countries
and regions. After a long period of stagnation, Europe recorded the
fastest year-on-year export growth of any region in Q2 at 2.7%, followed
by North America (2.1%), Asia (0.6%), South and Central America (0.4%)
and Other Regions (-1.0%, including Africa, the Commonwealth of Independent
States and the Middle East).
Disparities between regional growth rates was stronger on the import
side than on the export side, with positive growth of 6.5% in North
America, 3.1% in Asia and 1.6% in Europe, and declines of 2.3% in
South and Central America and 3.1% in Other Regions.
According to the press release, the WTO now expects world merchandise
trade volume as measured by the average of exports and imports to
grow 2.8% in 2015 and 3.9% in 2016.
On the export side, shipments from developed economies should rise
3.0% this year and 3.9% next year. Exports of developing economies
are expected to grow more slowly at 2.4% in 2015 and 3.8% in 2016.
Imports of developed economies should increase at around the same
rate in 2015 (3.1%) and in 2016 (3.2%), while those of developing
economies pick up from 2.5% this year to 5.2% next year.
The WTO economists said the strongest downward revision to the previous
export forecast for 2015 was applied to Asia, where their estimate
was lowered to 3.1% from 5.0% in April.
"This is mostly due to falling intra-regional trade as China's
economy has slowed," they added.
The downward revision to Asia on the import side was even stronger,
from 5.1% to 2.6%, partly due to lower Chinese imports which were
down 2.2% year-on-year in Q2 (non-seasonally adjusted data).
"The product composition of China's merchandise imports suggests
that some of the slowdown may be related to the country's ongoing
transition from investment to consumption led growth."
Large year-on-year drops in quantities of imported machinery (-9%)
and metals (iron and steel -10%, copper -6%) were recorded in customs
statistics for August, while strong increases were recorded for agricultural
products including cereal grains (+130%) and oilseeds (+33%).
According to the press release, another noteworthy revision relates
to the import forecast for South and Central America in 2015, which
was lowered to -5.6% from -0.5% in April.
"Much of this reduction can be attributed to adverse economic
developments in Brazil, which has been simultaneously hit by a fiscal
crisis, a financial scandal involving the country's largest company,
and falling export prices."
Brazil's merchandise imports in Q2 were down 13% year-on-year compared
to the same period in 2014. A rebound in imports of South and Central
America is expected in 2016 as Brazil's GDP growth stabilizes and
its imports start to recover.
Other countries in the region should also see imports accelerate as
their economies pick up next year. "The size of the rebound in
2016 is also partly explained by the fact that future growth will
be proceeding from a lower base following the steep decline in 2015."
The WTO economists however said that if the slowdown in emerging markets
worsens, the revised forecasts could still prove to be overly optimistic.
In particular, a slower rebound from recent declines in imports of
developing economies could shave half a percentage point off of global
trade growth in 2015, they said.
According to the press release, trade values in dollar terms have
declined in most countries since last year and were down roughly 12%
year-on-year in July at the world level.
"This is partly the result of a strong general appreciation of
the US dollar over this period (+15% in nominal effective terms against
major currencies, according to the Bank for International Settlements)."
The WTO economists said that there is generally an inverse relationship
between world trade values in current dollar terms and the value of
the US currency.
For example, Germany's exports and imports were both down 14% year
on year in dollar terms in July, but they were up 6% in euro terms,
they noted. +