Electronic Components and Agri Raw Material Stable in Covid-19, Export Orders Index
Falls to 83.3, Auto Production down to 79.7
WTO Goods Barometer Flashes Red as COVID-19 Disrupts
World Trade
The volume of world merchandise trade is likely to fall precipitously
in the first half of 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic disrupts the global economy,
according to the WTO Goods Trade Barometer released on 20 May. The index currently
stands at 87.6, far below the baseline value of 100, suggesting a sharp contraction
in world trade extending into the second quarter. This is the lowest value on record
since the indicator was launched in July 2016.
The Goods
Trade Barometer provides real-time information on the trajectory of world merchandise
trade relative to recent trends. The current reading captures the initial phases
of the COVID-19 outbreak, and shows no sign of the trade decline bottoming out yet.
This measure is consistent with the WTO's trade forecast issued on 8 April 2020,
which estimated that world merchandise trade could decline by between 13% and 32%
in 2020, depending on the duration of the pandemic and the effectiveness of policy
responses.
All of
the barometer's component indices are currently well below trend. The automotive
products index (79.7) was weakest of all, due to collapsing car production and sales
in major economies. The sharp decline in the forward-looking export orders index
(83.3) suggests that trade weakness will persist in the short-run. Declines in the
container shipping (88.5) and air freight (88.0) indices reflect weak demand for
traded goods as well as supply-side constraints arising from efforts to suppress
COVID-19. Only the indices for electronic components (94.0) and agricultural raw
materials (95.7) show signs of stability, although they too remain below trend.
Trade
had already been slowing in 2019 before the pandemic, weighed down by persistent
trade tensions and weakening economic growth. WTO trade statistics show that the
volume of world merchandise trade shrank by 0.1% in 2019, marking the first annual
decline since 2009, during the global financial crisis. Trade was relatively weak
in the final quarter of 2019, but this is unlikely to have been influenced by COVID-19,
which was first detected very late in the year.
Like
its counterpart for services, the Goods Trade Barometer aims to gauge momentum and
identify turning points in global trade growth. As such, it complements trade statistics
and forecasts from the WTO and other organizations. Readings of 100 indicate growth
in line with medium-term trends; readings greater than 100 suggest above-trend growth,
while those below 100 indicate below-trend growth.
[The full Goods Trade Barometer].