LDCs Demand
Medical Supplies for Covid-19
A new information note published by the WTO Secretariat
looks at how the COVID-19 pandemic has affected the participation of
least-developed countries (LDCs) in global trade. The note stresses that LDCs have
seen a significant decline in export earnings due to decreasing demand in key
markets, falling commodity prices and a decline in remittances and are likely
to be the hardest hit by the crisis due to their limited resources to stimulate
growth.
Most
LDCs have experienced a significant decline in export earnings since the
outbreak of COVID-19. The report anticipates that the downturn in world trade
in 2020 will continue to be particularly severe for LDCs.
LDC
exports of textiles and clothing have been badly affected by declining global
demand and supply chain disruptions. In addition, LDCs that depend on tourism
revenues are being hard hit by the slump in this sector.
There
are currently 47 LDCs, 36 of which have become WTO members. The full list of
LDCs can be found here.
The
note underscores that the pandemic is undermining the development gains of
countries such as Angola, Bangladesh and Vanuatu that are expected to graduate from
LDC status in the near future.
The
note also collates the measures that LDCs have taken to combat the pandemic,
ranging from strengthening health care systems to providing stimulus packages
to export-oriented sectors and liquidity support for small and medium-sized
enterprises.
In early May, the LDCs group called on other WTO members to
refrain from imposing export prohibitions or restrictions on medical goods and
food. They urged governments to facilitate trade in these goods, including by
implementing the provisions in the WTO’s Trade
Facilitation Agreement.
The
report notes that the international community is seeking to support LDCs’
participation in world trade by providing debt relief and strengthening social
sectors.
·
Among the COVID-19 pandemic’s
far-reaching consequences for the global economy, the least developed countries
(LDCs) are likely to be the hardest hit, even in countries spared the worst
effects of the virus itself. A lack of resources to support an economic rebound
is compounded by LDCs’ dependence on a limited range of products exported to a
few markets, some of which have been those worst affected by the COVID-19
outbreak. The ongoing pandemic threatens
to derail development gains in LDCs and may affect the near-term prospects for
some countries to graduate from LDC status.
·
The year 2020 started against the backdrop of
a subdued trade performance in 2019. The value of LDC exports of goods and
services declined by 1.6 per cent in 2019, a greater decline than that of world
exports (1.2 per cent). Consequently, the share of LDCs in world exports also
registered a marginal decline, falling to 0.91 per cent in 2019. The expected
downturn in trade in 2020 is likely to be even more severe for LDCs than at the
global level.
·
The pandemic has accentuated the slump in oil
prices seen in 2019. Declining demand, as well as supply disruptions, have
weighed significantly on LDC exports, especially exports of textiles and
clothing products. LDCs dependent on tourism revenues have seen the sector come
to a virtual standstill. As migrant workers from LDCs return from host
countries affected by the pandemic, flows of remittances — a critical source of
foreign exchange for many countries — have dramatically dried up. All of these
factors are predicted to worsen further in the coming months.
·
LDCs such as Angola and Vanuatu, which are
scheduled to graduate soon, and LDCs such as Bangladesh, which are on the path
to graduation in the next few years, have been experiencing unavoidable
declines in economic growth and export earnings.
·
The LDCs have called for countries to refrain
from export prohibitions and restrictions on medical goods and food, of which
many are net importers. Several LDCs have lowered duties on medical goods to
ensure their availability at more affordable prices to their citizens.
·
Since the start of the pandemic, at least
two-thirds of LDCs have put in place a variety of lockdown measures. Some LDCs
have announced stimulus packages, which have covered export-oriented sectors.
They have also strengthened healthcare systems and ensured social relief
packages and liquidity support to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs).
·
The international community has announced
support measures ranging from debt relief to strengthening social sectors and
providing social safety nets for the most vulnerable. Maintaining this
momentum, while redoubling coordination efforts, remains vital as the world
moves towards economic recovery.