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On recovery path: WTO pegs trade growth at 8% in 2021, highest in a decade

Says growth will slow to 4% in 2022 as effects of the pandemic will be felt

On recovery path: WTO pegs trade growth at 8% in 2021, highest in a decade
To date, more than 2.8 million people worldwide have died from Covid-19 and the number of global infections will soon exceed 130 million
Bloomberg
2 min read Last Updated : Apr 02 2021 | 1:30 AM IST
The World Trade Organization raised its projection for growth in global merchandise trade this year to 8 per cent — the biggest increase since 2010 — while warning Covid-19 continues to pose the greatest threat to the outlook as new waves of infection could undermine any hoped-for recovery.
 
The rebound marks a significant bounce from 2020, when the pandemic saw global trade contract by 5.3 per cent, less than the 9.2 per cent decline estimated in October, the WTO said in a report released in Geneva. Global trade may climb 4 per cent in 2022, it said.
 
Accelerated vaccinations could return trade to its pre-pandemic trend, but slower roll-outs could result in a 2 percentage-point decrease to the forecast, WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told reporters.
 
“A rapid vaccine roll-out is the best stimulus for the recovery,” she said. “Only by ramping up vaccines can we get the world economy back to full speed.”
 
Gross domestic product fell 3.8 per cent in 2020 — less than forecast — and may expand 5.1 per cent this year and 3.8 per cent in 2022, the WTO said.
 
“Keeping international markets open will be essential for economies to recover from this crisis and a rapid, global and equitable vaccine roll-out is a prerequisite for the strong and sustained recovery we all need,” Okonjo-Iweala said in the report.


 
A surge in demand for merchandise during the final half of 2020 helped counterbalance Covid-19’s initial disruption to global trade and produced more muted annual decline than the great recession, when global merchandise trade fell 12 per cent and GDP contracted by 2 per cent.
 
To date, more than 2.8 million people worldwide have died from Covid-19 and the number of global infections will soon exceed 130 million. The rapid development of multiple vaccines and their ongoing roll-out among major trading nations will could add about 1 percentage point to world GDP and about 2.5 percentage points to world merchandise trade growth in 2021, the WTO report said.
 
Nevertheless, the spread of more contagious and deadly variants of the virus pose an ongoing threat as Brazil, France and other nations grapple with an rising caseloads and overwhelmed hospitals.

Topics :WTOGlobal TradeGlobal economy