El Barómetro sobre el Comercio de Mercancías se mantiene próximo al valor de referencia mientras el conflicto de Ucrania y la COVID-19 se hacen sentir en el comercio
Según el último Barómetro sobre el Comercio de Mercancías de la OMC, el conflicto de Ucrania y los recientes confinamientos impuestos en China en relación con la pandemia parecen estar frenando el comercio mundial de mercancías durante el primer semestre de 2022. El valor actual de 99,0 es ligeramente inferior al valor de referencia del índice (100), que se compone de indicadores prospectivos en tiempo real, lo que indica que el comercio de mercancías sigue creciendo a un ritmo lento.
(de momento sólo en inglés)
The latest outlook scales back the earlier optimism in the barometer from February, which suggested that trade might have been approaching a turning point, with stronger growth expected the near future. The anticipated upturn may have been short-circuited by the conflict in Ukraine, which started in late February and triggered sharp rises in food and energy prices, which tend to reduce real incomes and lower economic growth. China’s imposition of major lockdowns to combat a new outbreak of COVID-19 has further disrupted trade and production.
The barometer index might have risen above trend if some of the underlying data in the component indices had not turned down in March and April. Component indices are smoothed to minimize the influence of extreme values, but this may obscure sudden changes in the latest months. Most of the barometer’s component indices are close to or above their baseline value of 100, for example export orders (101.2), automotive products (101.5), air freight (99.9), electronic components (103.8), and raw materials (99.5). Only container shipping remains firmly below trend (95.0). Non-smoothed data for export orders and air freight went from above trend in one period to below trend in the next, hinting at a sharper downturn. If the Ukraine crisis and Chinese lockdowns persist, their impact may be seen more clearly in the next release.
In April, the WTO forecasted 3.0% growth in the volume of world merchandise trade in 2022, down from the 4.7% growth predicted as of last October. The current barometer reading is broadly consistent with the April projection, but forecasts are less certain at the moment and should be interpreted with care.
The Goods Trade Barometer is a composite leading indicator providing real-time information on the trajectory of merchandise trade relative to recent trends ahead of conventional trade volume statistics. Readings of 100 indicate growth in line with medium-term trends; values greater than 100 suggest above-trend growth while values below 100 indicate the reverse. The full Goods Trade Barometer is available here.
Further details on the methodology are contained in the technical note here.