Global trade growth expectations have been successively downgraded over the past twelve months and year end 2023 numbers are likely to come out at about around 1%, according to December estimates prepared by the OECD. Long haul trade may even be solidly negative based on what we have been seeing for key trade generators such as China, the European Union, and the United States. Trade growth can only pick up if manufacturing activity does the same. The bulk of world trade consists in the movement of industrial inputs, intermediate and capital goods. As such global trade and industrial production are directly linked. Manufacturing has been weak all throughout 2023, but an improvement could take place in the second and third quarter of 2024.
Posts tagged as “Intermediate Goods”
Dependence entails risk. Reliance on a single supplier or source for imports of a certain raw material or intermediate product makes supply chains vulnerable to disruptions and geopolitical tensions. About 12% of world trade is in product groups where a single country has a share of more than 50% of exports of that product. In about half of all cases, China is the dominant exporter, but not everywhere. This article looks at which countries dominate exports for certain raw materials, intermediate and finished goods.