WTO Launched Study on Future of World Trade
At an event in London on 10 June, Deputy Director-General DJ Nordquist
emphasized that the WTO continues to provide the foundation for the large
majority of global trade, even as the trading system adapts to new
technologies, shifting supply chains and geopolitical uncertainty. She also
stressed the importance of advancing WTO reform while preserving the
predictability and transparency on which businesses depend. DDG Nordquist spoke
at the launch of the Dubai Multi Commodities Centre's Future of Trade Report
2026. Her remarks are below.
Key Highlights
·
DJ
Nordquist stated that the World Trade Organization remains the foundation of
global trade despite geopolitical tensions, technological disruption, and
supply-chain shifts.
·
She
delivered the remarks at the launch of the Future of Trade Report 2026 in
London, organized by Dubai Multi Commodities Centre and Asia House.
·
Global
trade in goods and services grew by approximately 4.7% in 2025, significantly outpacing
global economic growth of 2.9%.
·
WTO
economists project merchandise trade growth of 1.9% in 2026 and 2.6% in 2027.
·
The
WTO now has 166
members,
with no member ever leaving the organization, while over 20 countries are negotiating accession.
·
Around
72%
of global merchandise trade continues to take place under WTO most-favoured-nation
(MFN) rules, highlighting the organization's central role in global commerce.
·
Nordquist
emphasized that regional and bilateral trade agreements complement, rather than
replace, the multilateral WTO framework.
·
WTO
members are advancing new rule-making through plurilateral agreements on:
o
Services
domestic regulation
o
Investment
facilitation for development
o
E-commerce
·
The
WTO provides businesses with predictability through commitments on:
o
Tariffs
o
Customs
procedures
o
Technical
regulations
o
Services
trade
o
Intellectual
property rights
o
Transparency
obligations
·
WTO
committees were described as the “unsung heroes” of the trading system,
resolving about half
of the hundreds of trade concerns raised annually by members.
·
During
crises such as the COVID-19
pandemic,
the WTO helped governments identify bottlenecks and facilitate movement of
essential goods, including vaccines.
·
The
WTO is currently monitoring trade impacts related to developments around the
Strait of Hormuz through a dedicated real-time trade dashboard.
·
Of
approximately 78
trade measures
introduced in response to recent disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz,
nearly 70%
have been trade-facilitating, helping maintain supplies of energy, fertilizers, and
food.
·
Nordquist
acknowledged that WTO reform is necessary, as global trade rules have not fully
kept pace with changes in the world economy since 1995.
·
She
noted that although members failed to formally adopt parts of the Yaoundé Package at the latest ministerial
conference, negotiations continue in Geneva.
·
The
lapse of the WTO e-commerce moratorium is not unprecedented, and governments
have largely refrained from imposing digital customs duties so far.
·
Ongoing
cooperation includes:
o
A
provisional 66-member
E-Commerce Agreement
o
A
23-member
commitment
not to impose duties on each other's electronic transmissions
Key Message
DDG
Nordquist stressed that while the WTO faces reform challenges and must adapt to
emerging technologies and geopolitical realities, it remains the cornerstone of
the global trading system by providing predictability, transparency, dispute
prevention, and a rules-based framework that supports the vast majority of
international trade.
[ABS News Service/12.06.2026]
Good morning, everyone.
Let me begin by thanking Dubai Multi
Commodities Centre (DMCC) and Asia House for the invitation to join you today
and for producing another edition of the Future of Trade report.
At a time when businesses, governments,
and international organizations are all grappling with profound change,
initiatives like this one make an important contribution by helping us look
beyond the immediate headlines and think more strategically about where global
trade is heading.
And there is certainly no shortage of
issues to discuss.
·
Artificial intelligence is transforming production, services, and trade
operations.
·
Supply chains are adapting to geopolitical tensions, which includes
dealing with good ol' fashioned geography, not just
technology.
·
New technologies are changing how goods move, how services are
delivered, and how firms compete.
Taken together, these developments
raise important questions about the future of world trade and the institutions
that underpin it.
The headlines often focus on
fragmentation, de-risking, and frictions. Yet the data tell a more nuanced
story. Global trade in goods and services expanded by approximately 4.7% in
2025, significantly above the rate of global economic growth (2.9%) - almost
double -- and a significantly better performance than even our own economists
had predicted (-0.2%). While our economists expect merchandise trade
growth to slow to 1.9% in 2026, trade is projected to expand again to 2.6% in
2027. As you can tell, it's pretty hard to model something predicated on geonomic variables.
Among institutions governing
international trade, the WTO is sometimes portrayed (including in your report)
as struggling to keep pace. This narrative is understandable, but it is also
incomplete.
In fact, to quote the great American humorist Mark Twain, reports of the WTO's demise have been
greatly exaggerated.
If one looks only at the difficulty of
negotiating new agreements, it is easy to conclude that the system is under
strain. Yet if one looks at how governments and businesses actually behave, a
different picture emerges. The WTO today has 166 Members accounting for the
overwhelming majority of global trade. Not a single Member has ever chosen to
leave the Organization, while more than 20 governments are currently
negotiating accession - they want in. Whatever criticisms governments may have
of specific aspects of the system, they continue to see value in membership.
The trade data tell a similar story.
Despite the rapid growth of bilateral and regional trade agreements over the
past three decades, approximately 72 percent of global merchandise trade still
takes place on most-favoured-nation terms under WTO rules. Regional agreements
undoubtedly play an important role but they are built upon a multilateral
framework that continues to provide the foundation for global commerce. The WTO
remains the baseline.
Within the WTO itself, groups of
Members have been advancing new initiatives through plurilateral approaches,
including recent agreements on services domestic regulation, investment
facilitation for development, and e-commerce. Many Members see them as a
pragmatic way of advancing rule-making in areas where broad consensus among the
full Membership may be difficult to achieve. Together, these developments
demonstrate that the trading system is adapting to new realities rather than
paralysis.
The WTO matters because businesses
thrive on predictability - I don't need to tell the folks in this room that.
They need confidence that market access conditions will not change
unexpectedly, that regulations will be transparent, and that governments will
operate within a framework of agreed rules. Every day, companies make
investment, sourcing, and production decisions based on WTO commitments
relating to tariffs, customs procedures, technical regulations, services,
intellectual property, and transparency obligations.
Much of this work happens quietly. In
fact, one of the WTO's greatest strengths is that some of its most valuable
contributions receive the least public attention. When people think about the
Organization, they often focus on Ministerial Conferences, disputes, and major
negotiations. Yet much of the WTO's practical value lies in its day-to-day
work, particularly in the committees where delegates meet throughout the year
to exchange information, raise concerns, and address emerging trade issues.
These committees are the unsung heroes
of the multilateral trading system.
Every year, Members bring hundreds of
trade concerns to the WTO covering issues such as standards, licensing
requirements, customs procedures, subsidies, and technical regulations.
According to WTO data, approximately half of the trade concerns raised by
Members are eventually reported as resolved.
Every concern resolved through
discussion is a potential disruption avoided. Every exchange of information
helps traders better understand the conditions under which they operate. In a
world where supply chains are increasingly complex and interconnected, that
kind of predictability has real economic value.
The WTO's role becomes even more
apparent during economic shocks. The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated how
essential trade and cross-border supply chains can respond to global
emergencies. The WTO helped by providing timely information to policymakers,
identifying bottlenecks, and encouraging measures to speed the movement of
vaccine inputs and other critical products.
Today, we see similar needs in other
contexts. As developments in and around the Strait of Hormuz continue to
evolve, the WTO is monitoring trade flows through a dedicated dashboard that
combines vessel-tracking data with cross-commodity cargo intelligence. Updated
daily, it provides near-real-time insights into the volume and pattern of trade
in products transiting or affected by developments in the region. And what we
see is that governments' response to the Strait of Hormuz disruption has been
notably less restrictive than compared to the last 2 shocks of Covid and war in
Ukraine. Of the roughly 78 trade measures introduced so far, about 70% have
facilitated trade, including steps to boost supplies of oil, gas, and refined
products, ease export restrictions, and streamline customs procedures for
energy, fertilisers, and food.
Of course, the WTO cannot afford to
stand still.
The institution needs reform, and one
of the few issues on which there is broad agreement among Members is precisely
that point. The global economy has changed dramatically since 1995, but rules
have not been updated to match the economic reality. That's not unique to
trade: at least in the US, the government cannot match the pace of
innovation. My guess is that it's the same in many other countries.
So the challenge is not whether reform
is needed, but how to achieve it.
The WTO operates by consensus - which
has been defined as "unanimity" -- and brings together 166 Members
with different levels of economic development, legal and commerce systems, and
national priorities. Building agreement under those circumstances is inherently
difficult, particularly on complex and politically sensitive issues.
At the most recent Ministerial
Conference, Members were unable to formally adopt the Yaoundé Package,
including the extension of the e-commerce moratorium-an outcome of considerable
importance to businesses worldwide-and elements of the WTO reform agenda.
However, negotiations did not stop there, and Members have continued to engage
actively in Geneva to bridge differences on these issues.
This is not without precedent.
Throughout the WTO's history, there have been instances where ministers were
unable to finalize outcomes at a Ministerial Conference, and the work was
subsequently taken forward in Geneva through the General Council. The e-commerce
moratorium has lapsed twice before, so this is not unprecedented. On those
previous occasions, governments did not rush to introduce duties, and they have
not done so this time either, thus far at least.
What matters is that Members continue
to engage, negotiate, and look for solutions. And that is happening with the
provisional application of the 66-Member E-Commerce Agreement and the 23-Member
commitment to not impose duties on each other.
As we look ahead, the future of trade
will undoubtedly be shaped by forces that were barely imaginable when GATT or
then the WTO were created. New technologies will transform production. Digital
trade will continue to expand. Supply chains will evolve in response to both
economic and geopolitical realities.
The questions will change, but the need
for cooperation will not.
Businesses will continue to require
predictability.
Governments will continue to need
transparency.
Markets will continue to function best
when participants have confidence in the rules that govern them.
Those principles remain at the heart of
the WTO, and they are likely to become even more valuable in the years ahead.
Yes, the institution faces challenges.
Yes, it requires reform.
Yes, it must continue adapting to a
changing world.
Yet it remains the foundation for most
international trade, a source of transparency during periods of uncertainty, a
forum where governments can address concerns before they become disputes, and
an institution in which governments continue to invest because they recognize
its value.
In a world that is becoming more
complex, those functions are becoming more important, not less.
Thank you very much, and
congratulations again to DMCC and Asia House on the launch of the 2026 Future
of Trade report.