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Indebta > News > US-China trade war risks dragging the world into recession, warns WTO head
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US-China trade war risks dragging the world into recession, warns WTO head

News Room
Last updated: 2025/04/16 at 10:04 AM
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The US-China trade war risks dragging the world into recession, the head of the World Trade Organization has warned, with global output set to drop 7 per cent if the two economic powerhouses decouple fully.

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala told the Financial Times that US President Donald Trump’s tariffs and China’s retaliatory levies risked splitting the world into two trading blocs as countries are forced “to choose to be with one side or the other”.

“We’re very concerned that we’re seeing a potential decoupling of US/China trade; we really want to avoid a case of geopolitical fragmentation,” the WTO director-general said.

“That will lower global real GDP by 7 per cent in the long term,” she added.

Okonjo-Iweala said the US had in effect cut off all imports from China with its “reciprocal” tariffs, which are set at 145 per cent in addition to pre-existing duties, even as it temporarily exempted items such as smartphones and electronic equipment.

Trump’s tariffs — currently at a base rate of 10 per cent on all imports — will also hurt North American trade with the rest of the world, the WTO said in a forecast published on Wednesday.

Canada, the US and Mexico will be the only countries where both exports and import volumes will drop, if Trump’s tariffs are maintained at 10 per cent.

Trump has exempted many Mexican and Canadian products from his protectionist measures, as the US has a trade agreement with its neighbours, increasingly isolating the USMCA bloc from the global economy.

Overall USMCA exports will fall 12.6 per cent this year while their imports are expected to decline 9.6 per cent, the WTO said. This compares with previous projections of more than 2 per cent growth in both trade categories before Trump’s tariff announcements.

The trade body said that if Trump’s higher “reciprocal” tariffs were reintroduced in July following a 90-day pause, global trade in goods could drop 0.8 per cent this year. If other countries retaliated, uncertainty could shave off another 0.7 percentage points, the WTO said.

If US tariffs are maintained at 10 per cent, overall global trade volumes would fall by 0.2 per cent in 2025, the WTO said.

Okonjo-Iweala, a former Nigerian finance minister, said the poorest countries were already suffering. 

“They are very vulnerable. Among the 10 economies facing the highest reciprocal tariffs five are least developed countries,” she said. “We should really think in terms of restoring them to the no-tariff situations that they were in previously.”

However, she conceded that the US had “a point” that countries were overdependent on its market, driving a huge trade deficit. “They need to diversify. I think over-concentration in the production of certain goods should be looked at,” Okonjo-Iweala said.

“To have 95 per cent of semiconductors produced in one part of the world does not build global resilience. To have 80 per cent of vaccines exported by 10 countries in the world does not build resilience,” she added.

Okonjo-Iweala said she hoped her Geneva-based body, which has 166 members, could help broker a solution to the crisis.

The US was a founding member of the WTO but the Trump administration has increasingly shunned international organisations set up after the second world war.

One of Trump’s first moves after taking office in January was to sign executive orders starting the process of leaving the World Health Organization and the Paris climate accord.

WTO members are now more interested in reforming the trade body so that it maintains a level playing field, Okonjo-Iweala said.

“One of the good things coming out of this is that members are seeing the value of the predictability and stability of the system created by the WTO.”

Read the full article here

News Room April 16, 2025 April 16, 2025
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