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Business Economics Banking Money Markets Project Syndicate B2B Retail
International trade
Recovery in global trade hit by Covid
outbreaks in east Asia
Decline in exports from Taiwan combines with port closures in
China and Japan to hinder growth
Police officers explain Covid prevention measures to helmeted workers at Nanjing port in China. Photograph:
AFP/Getty Images
Phillip Inman
@phillipinman
Sun 29 Aug 2021 19.33 BST
A recovery in global trade during the summer is beginning to wane, according
to some early warning signs pointing to the negative effects of widespread
Covid-19 outbreaks in the manufacturing centres of east Asia.
A dramatic decline in exports from Taiwan, which makes many of the
computer chips used in cars and mobile phones, has combined with
temporary port closures and lockdowns in Australia, China and Japan to cut
the level of global trade.
The signs of a slowdown sparked a reaction at the weekend from a key
member of the oil cartel Opec, who said plans for an expansion of oil output
may need to be scrapped.
Kuwait’s oil minister, Mohammad Abdulatif al-Fares, said the 400,000
barrel-per-day increase in oil output agreed by Opec and its allies, a grouping
known as Opec+, at previous meetings this year to match rising demand
might be reconsidered at its next gathering later this week.
The minister told Reuters that while the economies of
east Asian countries and China continued to be
affected by outbreaks of the Delta variant, “caution
must be exercised”.
The cost of a barrel of Brent crude oil jumped by 11%
last week to $72.70 a barrel in response to the concerns
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of cutbacks in supply by Opec and energy firms
shutting US production in the Gulf of Mexico as
Hurricane Ida bore down.
Edward Moya, a senior market analyst at OANDA,
said: “Energy traders are pushing crude prices higher in anticipation of
disruptions in output in the Gulf of Mexico and on growing expectations
Opec+ might resist raising output given the recent Delta variant impact over
crude demand.”
Economists at Llewellyn Consulting said the outlook for Taiwanese export
orders, looking three months ahead, had fallen from 70% year-on-year
growth in 2020 to just 20%.
After an 18-month backlog, the fall in export orders was likely to restrict the
capacity of carmakers and other manufacturers over the coming months.
Some car firms have warned customers that they face a wait of more than six
months before some models are available again for sale.
“World trade continues to be disrupted by port closures, most recently at
Ningbo – China’s third largest port – which have also contributed to the
enormous increase in shipping container costs this year that result from
many containers being stranded in places other than where they are
needed,” said the independent consultancy.
“Another drag on world trade has been the persistent shortage of
semiconductor chips, which are nowadays a crucial input into motor vehicle
manufacturing. Given Taiwan’s pivotal role in the global semiconductor
industry, the decline in its export orders since February is a harbinger of
some further slowing in world trade growth.”
Australia, which exports much of the world’s iron ore, is expected to
narrowly avoid a second recession in two years when it reports national
income (GDP) figures later this week. Some analysts expect the latest quarter
to show it grew by as little as 0.1%, while others believe the country, where
many cities and regions have entered fresh lockdowns, might see its GDP go
into reverse.
Recent business surveys in the UK, Europe and the US have shown that a
rapid expansion across the developed world following the lifting of
restrictions in the spring has begun to peter out.
On Friday, the head of the US central bank, Jerome Powell, said the impact of
shortages on prices was likely to be limited and not last beyond the end of
the year.
However, some analysts have warned that low vaccination rates in some
countries and the spread of the Delta variant will hinder the growth in
exports well into 2022.
Topics
International trade
Global economy / Economics/ Coronavirus / China / Taiwan / Asia Pacific / news
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