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World trade slows sharply in 2001 amid the uncertain international situation |
Developing countries contributed to the vigorous expansion of world output and trade in 2000
Growth in world merchandise trade is expected to slow in volume terms to only 2% in 2001 — compared with 12% in 2000. Even this growth is not assured given the present great uncertainties about economic and trade developments, according to the report International Trade Statistics, 2001 published today (25 October 2001) by the World Trade Organization.
Trade in Western Europe and the transition economies is expected to increase
somewhat more than 2%, while that of North America is likely to be below the
global average. Japan is certain to experience a contraction in exports,
coupled with a moderate growth in imports.
These projections are based on preliminary figures for the first half of 2001 which suggest that the deceleration of trade growth this year will be much sharper than previously expected (early in 2001, trade was expected to grow by about 7% this year). An important factor behind the sharper-than-expected slowdown in world economic growth is the steep fall in expenditure on information technology products. Other factors include the unexpectedly strong slowdown in demand growth in Western Europe and the stagnation of merchandise imports into the United States. Growth in the value of North America's trade decelerated throughout the first six months of 2001, and in the second quarter both exports and imports were below their year-earlier levels. Western Europe's merchandise exports and imports values are estimated to have increased by only 2.5% and 1.5%, respectively (measured in euros, the increases are 9.5% and 8.5%, respectively). For the world as a whole, the value of merchandise trade was up only 1% in the first half, compared with a 12.5% gain for 2000 as a whole.
The report notes that 2001 contrasts sharply with the outstanding growth in global output and trade in 2000, when the expansion of merchandise output and trade — by 4.5% and 12% respectively — was the strongest in more than a decade. Economic growth accelerated in all major regions in 2000. North America and developing Asia, which had each recorded GDP growth above the global average in 1999, recorded only moderate accelerations. In contrast, economic activity picked up strongly in South America and Russia, after stagnating the previous year. Africa's output growth is estimated to have strengthened in 2000, but to a level still below that of other developing nations, while Western Europe's economic growth increased to 3.4%, its strongest expansion in the last decade. Japan's recovery meanwhile remained modest and fragile. The developing countries made an above average contribution to the vigorous expansion of world output and trade in 2000. The estimated 15% increase in the volume of merchandise exports from developing countries was three times faster than their GDP growth, and their shares in world trade and output continued to increase as it has done throughout the 1990s. Moreover, only a small part of this is the result of higher oil prices. It is due rather to their ability to expand their role in world exports of manufactured goods, the most dynamic part of world trade. Developing countries accounted for 27% of world exports of manufactures in 2000, a remarkable increase from their 17% share in 1990.
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