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http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/20...e-picture-is-looking-gloomy-for-global-trade/
Five reasons why the picture is looking gloomy for global trade…
Sep 24, 2014 6:42pmby Shawn Donnan
The World Trade Organisation released its latest forecasts for global trade on Tuesday and it is not a pretty picture. The WTO’s economists have lowered their forecasts sharply. They now expect global trade volumes to grow just 3.1 per cent this year, down from the 4.7 per cent they predicted in the spring. The main reasons for the gloom should be familiar by now: the slow recovery in those all-important developed economies and the return of geopolitical threats such as the Ukraine crisis.
This downgrade was pretty sharp from the WTO but I wouldn’t be surprised if there are more to come in the months ahead.
Here’s five reasons to be gloomy:
1. Global trade in the first six months of the year actually grew at an incredibly slow 1.8 per cent. That means that to hit its 3.1 per cent forecast for 2014 the WTO is counting on a major rebound in the second half of the year. Some countries like the US and China have reported some reasonably good monthly trade numbers over the summer. But is it going to last?
Source: WTO
2. European demand just doesn’t seem to be recovering. That matters because European imports represent almost a third of global merchandise imports. So if European companies and consumers are not buying, that hurts global trade.
Source: WTO
The EU’s members also have not been trading much with each other.
Source: WTO
3. Emerging economies look like a very mixed bag.
There’s those like China where trade is holding up.
Source: WTO
Those like Russia and Thailand where, thanks to political or geopolitical turmoil, things, predictably, are not looking great.
Source: WTO
And some big heavyweights like India and Indonesia where the trade numbers have not been looking at all good this year.
Source: WTO
4. Latin America actually saw trade contract by 0.8 per cent in the first half of 2014 thanks largely to a collapse in non-oil commodities and reduced demand from big Asian trading partners. For the year, the WTO is forecasting that exports from central and south America will grow by just 0.4 per cent and that imports will actually contract by 0.7 per cent, a reflection of the slowing economy in Brazil.
Things look pretty good in Mexico.
Source: WTO
But much less so in Argentina and Brazil.
Source: WTO
5. It may go without saying but geopolitical crises and Ebola outbreaks are not conducive to trade. Or reliable forecasts. Or, as WTO economists put it:
Five reasons why the picture is looking gloomy for global trade…
Sep 24, 2014 6:42pmby Shawn Donnan
The World Trade Organisation released its latest forecasts for global trade on Tuesday and it is not a pretty picture. The WTO’s economists have lowered their forecasts sharply. They now expect global trade volumes to grow just 3.1 per cent this year, down from the 4.7 per cent they predicted in the spring. The main reasons for the gloom should be familiar by now: the slow recovery in those all-important developed economies and the return of geopolitical threats such as the Ukraine crisis.
This downgrade was pretty sharp from the WTO but I wouldn’t be surprised if there are more to come in the months ahead.
Here’s five reasons to be gloomy:
1. Global trade in the first six months of the year actually grew at an incredibly slow 1.8 per cent. That means that to hit its 3.1 per cent forecast for 2014 the WTO is counting on a major rebound in the second half of the year. Some countries like the US and China have reported some reasonably good monthly trade numbers over the summer. But is it going to last?
Source: WTO
2. European demand just doesn’t seem to be recovering. That matters because European imports represent almost a third of global merchandise imports. So if European companies and consumers are not buying, that hurts global trade.
Source: WTO
The EU’s members also have not been trading much with each other.
Source: WTO
3. Emerging economies look like a very mixed bag.
There’s those like China where trade is holding up.
Source: WTO
Those like Russia and Thailand where, thanks to political or geopolitical turmoil, things, predictably, are not looking great.
Source: WTO
And some big heavyweights like India and Indonesia where the trade numbers have not been looking at all good this year.
Source: WTO
4. Latin America actually saw trade contract by 0.8 per cent in the first half of 2014 thanks largely to a collapse in non-oil commodities and reduced demand from big Asian trading partners. For the year, the WTO is forecasting that exports from central and south America will grow by just 0.4 per cent and that imports will actually contract by 0.7 per cent, a reflection of the slowing economy in Brazil.
Things look pretty good in Mexico.
Source: WTO
But much less so in Argentina and Brazil.
Source: WTO
5. It may go without saying but geopolitical crises and Ebola outbreaks are not conducive to trade. Or reliable forecasts. Or, as WTO economists put it:
Tensions between the European Union and the United States on the one hand and the Russian Federation on the other over Ukraine have already resulted in trade sanctions on certain agricultural commodities, and the number of products affected could widen if the crisis persists. Conflict in the Middle East is also stoking uncertainty, and could lead to a spike in oil prices if the security of oil supplies is threatened. Finally, an outbreak of Ebola haemorrhagic fever in West Africa has proven difficult to contain, and any spread of the disease could trigger a broader panic with major economic implications for West Africa, and perhaps even beyond the region. The presence of several such low probability/high cost risk factors has made the trade forecast particularly difficult to gauge this year.