Global merchandise trade is slowing
with production and supply disruptions in critical sectors dampening growth
alongside cooling import demand, according to the WTO’s latest Goods Trade
Barometer.
Recent supply shocks, including port gridlock arising
from surging import demand in the first half of the year and disrupted
production of widely traded goods have contributed to the trade barometer’s
decline.
The WTO Goods Trade Barometer issued on 15 November shows a reading of 99.5, close
to the baseline value of 100 for the index, indicating growth in line with
recent trends.
The return to trend follows the record reading of
110.4 in the previous barometer issued in August, which reflected both the
strength of the trade recovery and the depth of the pandemic-induced shock last
year.
It now appears that demand for traded goods is also
easing, as illustrated by falling export orders, which further weighed down the
barometer. Cooling import demand could help ease port congestion, but backlogs
and delays are unlikely to be eliminated as long as container throughput
remains at or near record levels.
All of the barometer’s component indices were
declining in the latest period, reflecting a broad loss of momentum in global
goods trade. The steepest decline was seen in the automotive products index
(85.9), which dropped below trend as a shortage of semiconductors hampered
vehicle production worldwide. This shortage was also reflected in the
electronic components index (99.6), which fell from above trend to on trend.
Indices for export orders (97.8), container shipping (100.3) and raw materials
(100.0) also returned to near their recent trends. Only the air freight index
(106.1) remained firmly above trend as shippers sought substitutes for ocean
transport.
The latest barometer reading is broadly consistent
with the WTO’s revised trade forecast of 4 October, which foresaw global
merchandise trade volume growth of 10.8% in 2021 — up from 8.0% forecasted in
March — followed by a 4.7% rise in 2022. The forecast also showed quarterly
trade growth slowing in the second half of 2021 as the volume of merchandise
trade volume approached its pre-pandemic trend.
The outlook for world trade continues to be
overshadowed by considerable downside risks, including regional disparities,
continued weakness in services trade, and lagging vaccination rates,
particularly in poor countries. Covid-19 continues to pose the greatest threat
to the outlook for trade, as new waves of infection could easily undermine the
recovery.
In September, the American Apparel and Footwear
Association warned the US economic recovery is under
threat as supply chains including apparel and
textile ones continue to suffer unprecedented disruptions.
By Just Style