Global trade growth in 2023 is still expected to be
subpar despite a slight upgrade to GDP projections since last fall, WTO
economists have said.
Issued by the
World Trade Organization (WTO) yesterday (5 April), the forecast set out in the
new ‘Global Trade Outlook and Statistics’ report, estimates real global GDP
growth at market exchange rates of 2.4% for 2023.
Projections for both trade and
output growth are below the averages for the past 12 years of 2.6% and 2.7%
respectively.
Weighed down by the effects of
the war in Ukraine, stubbornly high inflation, tighter monetary policy and
financial market uncertainty, the volume of world merchandise trade is expected
to grow by 1.7% this year, following 2.7% growth in 2022, a
smaller-than-expected increase that was pulled down by a sharp slump in the
fourth quarter, the WTO said.
“Trade continues to be a force
for resilience in the global economy, but it will remain under pressure from
external factors in 2023,” said WTO director-general Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. “This
makes it even more important for governments to avoid trade fragmentation and
refrain from introducing obstacles to trade. Investing in multilateral
cooperation on trade, as WTO members did at our Twelfth Ministerial Conference
last June, would bolster economic growth and people’s living standards over the
long term.”
The 2.7% increase in world
trade volume in 2022 was weaker than the WTO’s October forecast of
3.5%, as a sharper-than-expected quarter-on-quarter decline in the fourth
quarter dragged down growth for the year. Several factors contributed to that
slump, including elevated global commodity prices, monetary policy tightening
in response to inflation, and outbreaks of Covid‑19 that disrupted production
and trade in China.
Notably, trade growth last
year turned out to be in line with the 2.4% to 3% baseline scenario in the
WTO’s March 2022 initial report on the war in Ukraine, and well above
its more pessimistic scenario in which trade would have grown just 0.5% as
countries started to split into competing economic blocs. In the event,
international markets remained broadly open.
The 1.7% forecast for trade
growth in 2023, meanwhile, is up from the previous estimate of 1% from last
October. A key factor here is the relaxation of Covid-19 pandemic controls in
China, which is expected to unleash pent-up consumer demand in the country, in
turn boosting international trade.
WTO chief economist Ralph Ossa
explained: “The lingering effects of Covid-19 and the rising geopolitical
tensions were the main factors impacting trade and output in 2022 and this is
likely to be the case in 2023 as well. Interest rate hikes in advanced
economies have also revealed weaknesses in banking systems that could lead to
wider financial instability if left unchecked. Governments and regulators need
to be alert to these and other financial risks in the coming months.”
Looking ahead to 2024, trade
growth should rebound to 3.2%, as GDP picks up to 2.6%, but this estimate is
more uncertain than usual due to the presence of substantial downside risks,
including geopolitical tensions, food supply shocks, and the possibility of
unforeseen fallout from monetary tightening.