People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXIII
No.
32 August 09, 200 |
ECONOMIC
NOTES
Global
Trade in a Time
of Crisis
C
P Chandrasekhar
WITH
the world well into the second year of a recession whose intensity is
unprecedented in the period since the Second World War, two questions
are
receiving considerable attention. The first, of course, is whether the
evidence
of a decline in the rate of contraction of output and rate of increase
in
unemployment in the
The
case for desynchronisation is difficult to make in a globalised and
more
integrated world for three reasons. First, globalisation implies that
integration of economies through trade is substantially more than it
used to be
so that a downturn in one part of the globe would quickly transmit
itself to
other regions and countries. Second, globalisation results in the
creation of
multi-country production platforms for various final goods. This
creates
international production chains, so that an increasing share of trade
is not
the cross-border movement of products from different industries and
activities
or even of dissimilar products from technologically similar industries.
Rather
a significant part of trade is intra-industry and involves the movement
across
borders of semi-finished products at different stages of processing.
When a
recession hits any particular industry and reduces the volume of trade
in that
area, the derived demands for the inputs at different stages of the
production
chain fall, spreading the effects of the recession globally. Finally,
trade
liberalisation has removed quantitative restrictions and reduced import
duties
across-the-board in most countries. Depending on the extent of trade
liberalisation the relative importance of the domestic market in
driving growth
has declined to different degrees in different countries. This implies
that
unless countries alter the degree of protection they resort to, using
the
domestic market as a foil against the effects of a decline in trade is
difficult to ensure. And opting for protection at a time of crisis
would only
invite retaliatory action from trade partners.
These
features of trade in a globalised world imply that desynchronisation
leading to
some countries serving as shock absorbers and even sources of stimuli
for
growth depends on the degree of globalisation and liberalisation
itself. This
in turn implies that assessments of the extent of desynchronisation
cannot rely
merely on evidence on the differential distribution of the slowdown in
GDP
growth or increase in unemployment, but must examine changes in the
rate of
growth and pattern of world trade as well.
SHARP
DROP IN
IMPORTS
AND SERVICES
Trade
data at a global level is released with a lag when compared with data
on GDP
and in the case of some countries even when compared with employment
and
unemployment data. Not surprisingly, it was only in July that the data
on
international trade trends during the first quarter of 2009 in the G7
countries
and the world economy was released by the OECD Secretariat and the
World Trade
Organisation respectively. To recall, while the slump in production in
the
developed countries has been with us since the end of 2007, it was in
the last
quarter of 2008 and the first quarter of 2009 that the crisis was most
intense.
And whatever evidence we have about the crisis moderating and even
possibly
bottoming out comes from the second quarter of the year. So the most
recent
evidence on international trade trends relates to the period when the
recession
was possibly in its most intensive phase.
As
the WTO�s World Trade Report 2009
notes: �Signs of a sharp deterioration in the global economy were
evident in
the second half of 2008 and the first few months of 2009 as world trade
flows
sagged and production slumped, first in developed economies and then in
developing countries. Although world trade grew by 2 per cent in volume
terms
over the course of 2008, it tapered off in the last six months of the
year and
was well down on the 6 per cent volume increase posted in 2007.� The
most
important trend the evidence points to is the sharp contraction in
imports into
(and, of course, exports from) the G7 countries. The decline in import
growth
relative to the previous quarter which was close to 6 per cent in the
last
quarter of 2008, jumped to 10.5 per cent in the first quarter of 2009.
This
trend seems to be generalised across the G7.
The
contraction in import growth on a year on year basis was even sharper.
The
quarter-on-previous-quarter and year-on-year rates of growth of imports
stood
at -9.5 and -23.3 per cent for Germany and -11.8 and -19 per cent in
the case
of the US. With the G7 countries accounting for 40 per cent of global
merchandise imports this must have had a severe contractionary impact
on global
economic activity.
The
slowdown was not restricted to merchandise trade alone. Compared with
the
previous quarter, the value of imports of goods and services into OECD
countries, measured in seasonally adjusted current price US dollars,
dropped
significantly in the first quarter of 2009, even if less sharply then
the
volume of goods imports. The figure fell by 15.2 per cent. On a
year-on-year
basis, the value of imports of goods and services declined by 27.9 per
cent.
Thus the sharp drop observed in Q4 2008 continued in Q1 2009, though in
both
comparisons, goods fell much more sharply at about twice the rates than
those
of services.
IMPACT
ON
The
effects of this slowdown on countries like
The
impact on
This is
significant given the role of this product
group in the hi-tech manufacturing sector in
The real
point is that exports in general and therefore
the exports of services constitutes a much smaller proportion of GDP in
India
than merchandise exports constitute in China�s GDP. Hence, it is not
UNLIKELY TO
SPUR RECOVERY
Seen in this
light, the argument that even if the G7
economies, especially the US, continue to bounce along the bottom, the
global
economy can record a significant recovery because of a return to high
growth in
China and India does not seem to have much basis. This would require in
the
first instance a sharp shift in
If this
combination of factors does not play out,
there is unlikely to be a return to high growth in these two large
economies,
which could help lift the global economy without aggravating
pre-existing
global imbalances. On the other hand, if there is any revival of growth
in
these economies because of a leakage of the demand generated by the
State-financed stimulus being experimented with in the US, UK and
elsewhere in
the G7, imbalances both in terms of the global distribution of growth
and the
global balance of payments would only intensify. This would intensify
current
demands for a dose of protectionism. Not surprisingly, the World Trade
Report
from the WTO has among its focal themes, �the challenge of ensuring
that the
channels of trade remain open in the face of economic adversity.� This,
in its
view, requires the design of �well-balanced contingency measures� to
deal with
a variety of unanticipated market situations, with �the right balance
between
flexibility and commitments� in trade agreements. �If contingency
measures are
too easy to use, the agreement will lack credibility. If they are too
hard to
use, the agreement may prove unstable as governments soften their
resolve to
abide by commitments.� But the current conjuncture seems to be one
where such
balance would be near impossible to achieve.