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Recent trends in World Trade By Alain Henriot Delegate Director Coe-Rexecode (Paris) Kiel, 15th-16th March 2010
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- 2 1. Overview of the world economy and the linkage with world trade 2. Imports and domestic demand 3. Exports and price competitiveness 4. Trade balances Content
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- 3 Financial and raw materials markets have given an early sign of the rebound at the beginning of 2009, but show now signs of hesitation
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Raw material and energy prices have also strongly recovered but signs of hesitation can be seen recently - 4
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- 5 World economy fell into recession in 2008Q4 and 2009Q1 before registering a positive growth in 2009Q2, which strengthened in the second half of 2009
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- 6 World industrial production back to previous trend (but a gap remains in terms of level)
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- 7 World trade picked up briskly in the second half of 2009
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- 8 « Soft » data (here world PMI export order books) gave a leading signal of the upturn, but were misleading on the exact timing of the recovery and to some extent on its magnitude
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- 9 The gap between the current level of world trade and the pre-crisis level remains big although narrowing …
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- 10 … the consequence of an historical drop in trade flows World trade: an historical perspective
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- 11 Turning points of world trade and industrial production growth cycles are very similar Growth cycles of world imports and world industrial production
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- 12 World trade forecast: a strong rebound followed by a moderate growth (+7.4% in 2010 after -13.5% in 2009)
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- 13 First signals of a recovery were observed in emerging countries but no decoupling Import levels in volume terms
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- 14 China played a leading role, leading other Asian countries and then Western economies China: imports by main suppliers
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- 15 The situation in other emerging countries remain heterogeneous regarding imports dynamism, although all regions came back to a positive trend Import levels in volume terms
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- 16 We can expect only a moderate growth of developed countries imports in 2010 in volume terms. No further gains of terms of trade in 2010 (transfers of about 1% of GDP in 2009). Import levels in volume terms
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- 17 Weakness of the Euro: a relief for the Euro area exporters Price competitiveness: national export prices/competitors in a common currency
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- 18 Main trade imbalances have not disappeared with the crisis Current account balance
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- 19 Downside risks . Would Europe and the U.S. find enough support from their internal demand to keep the global recovery continuing?. Overheating in China might trigger a double dip late 2010. Global imbalances put a threat on the exchange rate system. As a consequence of trade deficits and high unemployment, the U.S. and Europe can be attracted by protectionist measures Forecast risks
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- 20 Upside risks. The catching up process (huge output gap) might imply a quicker and longer economic growth of activity and trade than expected. Emerging countries could take the lead of world trade growth to satisfy internal needs Forecast risks
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