Just Earth News | @justearthnews | 06 Oct 2020, 09:42 pm Print
Pixabay
Geneva/Xinhua: World merchandise trade is expected to fall by 9.2 percent in 2020, followed by a 7.2-percent rise in 2021, the World Trade Organization (WTO) said on Tuesday in its revised trade forecast.
In April, the WTO had predicted a decline in the volume of world merchandise trade for 2020 between 13 percent and 32 percent, as the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted economic activity and lives around the world.
"World trade shows signs of bouncing back from a deep, COVID-19 induced slump," explained WTO economists in a press release, adding that "strong trade performance in June and July have brought some signs of optimism for overall trade growth in 2020."
Nevertheless, the WTO's updated forecast for the next year is more pessimistic than the previous estimate of 21.3-percent growth, leaving merchandise trade well below its pre-pandemic trend in 2021.
WTO cautioned that "any recovery could be disrupted by the ongoing pandemic effects."
- Oil market in panic: Middle East strikes push prices past $110 a barrel
- Coding at risk? Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei says human-centric roles may last longer
- Amazon’s mega office in Bengaluru is here. See all details
- Why is Nissan recalling 640000 vehicles? Check all details
- Microsoft appoints Asha Sharma as Gaming CEO. Who is she?

