Saturday, 10 May 2025, 6:05 am

    Global trade growth seen decelerating further this year

    Governments in emerging-market and developing economies (EMDEs) need to forge stronger cooperation to increase cross-border trade as global trade growth is seen to decelerate further this year, according to the World Bank.

    Its Global Economic Prospects report said that after softening to 4 percent last year, global trade growth should slow down to 1.6 percent in 2023, largely reflecting weakening global demand.

    “Trade is envisaged to be particularly subdued in EMDEs with strong trade linkages to major economies where demand is expected to slow sharply. In all, the current post-recession rebound in global trade is on course to be among the weakest on record,” it said.

    According to the World Bank, travel and tourism were to accelerate further although constrained by slower global activity and high input costs.

    Goods trade is expected to moderate owing to subdued demand and a gradual shift in consumption toward services, it said.

    “Weaker-than-expected global demand and renewed supply chain bottlenecks pose downside risks to the global trade outlook,” it added.

    Citing earlier reports, the Global Economic Prospects report said an intensification in trade protectionism, fragmentation of trade networks, and security concerns about supply chains could increase trade costs and slow trade growth.

    It said global trade growth decelerated in the second half of 2022, along with deteriorating activity in major economies.

    “Weakening trade mirrored the slowdown in global industrial production, as demand shifted toward its pre-pandemic composition and away from goods,” it added.

    The report said despite this moderation, goods trade surpassed pre-pandemic levels last year, services trade continued to recover, while tourism flows rebounded as many countries eased travel restrictions but remained well below pre-pandemic levels and uneven across regions.

    As global trade growth slows, World Bank Group president David Malpass highlighted the importance of stronger cooperation to increase cross-border trade.

    Malpass said greater efforts are needed to diversify products and markets, gain access to trade finance and strengthen trade facilitation through arrangements, such as customs agreements.

    “Governments should reduce arbitrary barriers to both imports and exports alike. Protectionist measures including the latest wave of export bans on food and fertilizers should be shunned,” he said.

    Related Stories

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here
    Captcha verification failed!
    CAPTCHA user score failed. Please contact us!

    spot_img

    Latest Stories