World Services
Trade Volume Fell by 4.3% in Q1 of 2020
Services Trade Barometer
Signals Resilience in Key Sectors Amid Overall Decline
Passenger air transport
hit the most; container shipping, construction and services PMI show signs of
turnaround (India’s Software Export Rise by 8% in Covind-19 period!)
The services trade
activity index of the World Trade Organization (WTO), which provides an
approximate measure of the volume of world services trade, declined 4.3 per
cent (year-on-year) in the first quarter of 2020 with passenger air transport
taking the hardest hit owing to the Covid-19 pandemic, according to the latest
reading from the WTO Services Trade Barometer.
World services trade likely remained far below trend
through the second quarter of 2020 amid the economic fallout from COVID-19, but
the latest reading from the WTO Services Trade Barometer also shows modest
gains in some key sectors, suggesting a degree of resilience in the face of the
pandemic. While the 17 September reading of 95.6 is the weakest on record for
the index, and significantly lower than its baseline value of 100, the
barometer’s measures are in aggregate outperforming recent trends in actual
services trade, a gap that in the past has preceded a positive shift in trade
momentum.
Most of the barometer's component indices remain below
trend but some show signs of bottoming out. Passenger air transport (49.2) has
been hardest hit by the pandemic, with the biggest decline ever recorded for
any of the barometer's components, reflecting the precipitous drop in travel
linked to COVID-19 and efforts to stop its spread. The contraction in this
sector has been sufficiently large as to weigh on total global services trade,
though it appears to have stabilized recently. Indices representing container
shipping (92.4), construction (97.3), and the global services Purchasing
Managers' Index (97.0) also show signs of turning around. The upturn in the PMI
is noteworthy since it is the most forward-looking component of the services
barometer. Meanwhile, the ICT services index tumbled to 94.6 despite robust
demand for these services during the pandemic. The financial services index
(100.3) was the sole component index that remained on trend as of
mid-September.
The services trade activity index, which provides an
approximate measure of the volume of world services trade, registered a
year-on-year decline of 4.3% in the first quarter of 2020. While substantial,
this decline is smaller than those seen during the financial crisis over a
decade ago, when services trade fell by 5.1% in the first quarter of 2009
compared to the previous year before registering an even bigger 8.9% slump in
the second quarter. Services trade growth had been slowing in the second half
of 2019, and the recent contraction in services trade reflects a weakening pace
of global economic growth as well as the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic.
While the index is expected to remain below trend into the second half of the
year, a recovery in passenger air transport would make a powerful contribution
to a turnaround.
The Services Trade Barometer highlights turning points
and changing patterns in world services trade. Unlike its counterpart for
goods, the fluctuations registered by the services indicator coincide with
movements in actual trade flows, rather than anticipating them. Readings of 100
indicate growth in line with medium-term trends. Readings greater than 100
suggest above-trend growth while those below 100 indicate the opposite.
The full Services Trade Barometer is available here.