Developing Countries
Share in World Export Rises to 47%, Asia Leads Growth
The future of world trade, and the global trading system, will be
shaped by a range of economic, political and social factors, including technological
innovation, shifts in production and consumption patterns, and demographic
change, according to the 2013 World Trade Report published by the WTO on 18
July 2013.
One of
the most significant drivers of change is technology. Not only have revolutions
in transport and communications transformed our world but new developments,
such as 3D printing, and the continuing spread of information technology will
continue to do so. Trade and foreign direct investment, together with a greater
geographical spread of income growth and opportunity, will integrate a growing
number of countries into more extensive international exchange. Higher incomes
and larger populations will put new strains on both renewable and non-renewable
resources, generating even greater need for careful resource management. More
effort must also be devoted to addressing environmental issues, the report
says.
Regulatory Convergence
Economic
and political institutions will continue to have a significant role to play in
shaping international co-operation, including in trade, as will the interplay
of cultural customs among countries. Non-tariff measures will gain in
prominence and regulatory convergence will likely constitute the greatest
challenge to the trading system of the future.
Main
points of the Report
Trends in
international trade
·
Dramatic
decreases in transport and communication costs have
been the driving forces behind today’s global trading system. Geopolitics has
also played a decisive role in advancing and reinforcing these structural
trends.
·
In the last 30 years, trade in merchandise and commercial services have increased by about 7 per cent per year on
average, reaching a peak of $18 trillion and $4 trillion respectively in 2011.
When trade is measured in value-added terms, services play a larger role.
·
Between 1980 and 2011, developing economies raised their share in world exports from 34 per
cent to 47 per cent and their share in world imports from 29 per cent to 42
per cent. Asia is playing an increasing
role in world trade.
·
For a number of decades, world trade has grown on average nearly twice as fast as world
production. This reflects the increasing prominence of international supply
chains and hence the importance of measuring trade in value-added terms.
·
Simulations show that in a dynamic economic and
open trade environment, developing countries are likely to outpace developed
countries in terms of both export and GDP growth by a factor of two to three in
future decades. By contrast, their GDP would grow by less than half this rate
in a pessimistic economic and protectionist scenario, and export growth would
be lower than in developed countries.
Fundamental
economic factors
·
Demographic change affects trade through its impact
on countries’ comparative advantage and on import demand. An ageing population, migration, educational
improvements and women’s
participation in the labour force will all play a role in years to come, as
will the continuing emergence of a global middle class.
·
Investment in physical
infrastructure can facilitate the integration of new players into
international supply chains. The accumulation of capital and the build-up of knowledge and technology associated
with investment, particularly foreign direct investment, can also enable
countries to move up the value chain by altering their comparative advantage.
·
New players have emerged among the countries
driving technological progress. Countries representing 20 per cent of the
world’s total population accounted for about 70 per cent of research and development
(R&D) expenditure in 1999, but only about 40 per cent in 2010. Technology spill-overs are largely regional
and stronger among countries connected by production networks. In addition
to the traditionally R&D intensive manufacturing sectors, knowledge-intensive business services
are emerging as key drivers of knowledge accumulation.
·
The shale
gas revolution portends dramatic shifts in the future pattern of energy
production and trade as North America becomes energy sufficient. Increasing water scarcity in the future in large
swathes of the developing world may mean that the long-term decline in the
share of food and agricultural products in international trade might be
arrested or even reversed.
·
Ample opportunities exist for policy actions, at the national and multilateral level, to reduce transportation costs and offset the effect of higher fuel costs in the future –
improving the quantity and quality of transportation infrastructure,
successfully concluding the Doha Round negotiations on trade facilitation,
introducing more competition on transport routes, and supporting innovation.
·
Improvements in institutional quality,
notably in relation to contract enforcement, can reduce the costs of
trade. Institutions are also a source of comparative advantage, and trade and
institutions strongly influence each other.
Trade
openness
·
Successful integration into global markets requires
the constant need for individuals and societies to cope with changes in the competitive environment. These adjustments
can put labour markets under strain and can shape attitudes towards trade
openness.
·
Societies’ transition to a sustainable development
path requires careful management of the multi-faceted
relationship between trade and the
environment in order to maximize the environmental benefits that open trade
can bring.
·
The expansion of trade needs to be supported by a
stable financial and monetary system – delivering a sufficient volume of trade
finance at an affordable cost, particularly for developing countries, and macroeconomic
policies that promote exchange rate
stability.
Prospects
·
Some of the main trends which will affect world
trade in the coming decades are the emergence
of international value chains, the rise of new forms of regionalism, the growth of trade in services, the greater
incidence of non-tariff measures,
higher and more volatile commodity prices, the rise of emerging economies,
and evolving perceptions about the link between trade, jobs and the
environment.
·
These trends will raise a number of challenges for
the WTO. Trade opening, especially in the context of non-tariff measures beyond
WTO disciplines, is taking place outside of the WTO. A greater focus on regulatory convergence will therefore
be required. Interdependence between trade in goods and trade in services is
increasing. Frictions in natural resource markets expose some regulatory gaps.
The emergence of new players affects global trade governance in ways that need
to be better understood. Coherence between WTO rules and non-trade regulations
in other multilateral fora needs to be maintained.
·
Addressing these challenges will involve reviewing
and possibly expanding the WTO agenda. Traditional market access issues will
not disappear but new issues, particularly with regard to non-tariff measures,
are emerging. Internal governance matters as well as the role of the WTO in
global governance may need to be addressed. An important issue will be how to “multilateralize” the gains made in preferential trade agreements
and to secure regulatory convergence.