Plight of Foreign Trade in Latin America and Caribbean Due to Pandemic
- Economic Commission for Latin
America and the Caribbean -
The Economic
Commission for Latin America and the
Caribbean (ECLAC)'s new Special Report
COVID-19, released August 6, emphasizes that
deepening regional integration is indispensable
for emerging from the crisis. Their press release
on the occasion follows:
Latin America and the Caribbean's foreign trade
will experience a sharp drop of 23 per cent in
2020 -- exceeding the 21 per cent decline recorded
during the 2009 financial crisis -- as a result of
the economic effects arising from the coronavirus
(COVID-19) pandemic, ECLAC indicated today in a
new report.
At a press conference, the Executive Secretary of
the Economic Commission for Latin America and the
Caribbean (ECLAC), Alicia Bárcena, unveiled the
institution's Special Report COVID-19 No. 6,
entitled "The Effects of the Coronavirus Disease
(COVID-19) Pandemic on International Trade and
Logistics, in which the Commission forecasts that
the value of regional exports will contract -23
per cent this year while imports will shrink -25
per cent, a figure that also exceeds the -24 per
cent recorded during the 2008-2009 financial
crisis.
This decline is taking place in a global context
in which international trade accumulated a 17 per
cent drop in volume between January and May 2020.
Latin America and the Caribbean is the developing
region most affected by this situation, and it
will be marked mainly by reduced shipments of
manufactured goods, minerals and fuel.
The collapse of tourism (-50 per cent) will drag
down service exports, especially from the
Caribbean, while intraregional trade will also
undergo a sharp contraction of -23.9 per cent,
affecting manufactured goods in particular. All of
this will lead to a loss of industrial capacity
and a reprimarization of the region's export
basket, the report warns.
"Deepening regional integration is crucial to
emerge from this crisis. With pragmatism, we must
rekindle the vision of an integrated Latin
American market. In addition, the region must
reduce costs through efficient, smooth and secure
logistics," Alicia Bárcena stated while presenting
the report.
According to ECLAC's document, the value of the
region's goods exports and imports declined by 17
per cent between January and May 2020 compared
with the same period of 2019. Both flows plunged
towards the end of that five-month period in 2020,
with a 37 per cent year-on-year drop in May alone.
In the first five months of this year, sharp
declines were seen in the value of Latin American
and Caribbean shipments to the United States
(-22.2 per cent), the European Union (-14.3 per
cent) and within the region (-23.9 per cent),
which together absorbed 69 per cent of its total
goods exports in 2019. In contrast, shipments to
Asia have shown greater resilience. In particular,
exports to China fell less than 2 per cent between
January and May and recovered in April and May, in
line with that economy's gradual reopening, which
constitutes a positive sign, especially for South
American countries that export commodities.
For 2020 as a whole, it is forecast that the
biggest contraction in regional exports will be
seen among those bound for the United States (-32
per cent) and within the region (-28 per cent),
while shipments to China are expected to fall by
just -4 per cent.
In analyzing the region's sectors, the greatest
decline between January and May versus the same
period of 2019 was seen in mining and oil (-25.8
per cent), followed by manufactured goods (-18.5
per cent). In contrast, the sector of agricultural
and livestock products notched a slight increase
of 0.9 per cent. That reflects the fact that
demand for food is less sensitive to contractions
in economic activity, since it is an essential
good, the report indicates.
On a country level, ECLAC's report states that
only four nations -- all of them in Central
America -- saw their exports rise between January
and May 2020: Costa Rica (2 per cent), Honduras (2
per cent), Guatemala (3 per cent) and Nicaragua
(14 per cent). This is due to a combination of
greater sales of medical supplies and personal
protective gear (especially masks) and of
agricultural products (the demand for which has
been less affected by the pandemic), along with
the relative resilience exhibited by intra-Central
American trade.
Meanwhile, imports during this same period fell
in all countries (-17.1 per cent in the regional
average value), due to the deep recession that the
region is undergoing. Particularly worrisome is
the contraction in the importation of capital
goods and intermediate inputs (-14.5 per cent and
-13.6 per cent, respectively), which will affect
the investment rate and will compromise the
recovery, the publication warns.
In addition, global maritime trade via containers
has traced a downward trend since the pandemic
broke out. In Latin America, there was a -6.1 per
cent year-on-year variation in the period of
January-May 2020, with sharp declines in April and
May. As a result, port throughput has fallen in
the vast majority of ports in the region (with a 1
per cent regional average decline between January
and May 2020).
Meanwhile, regional air traffic suffered a true
collapse in this period: -95 per cent in terms of
passengers and -46 per cent for cargo, following
the global trend, while the closure of
production-related activities, stricter health
measures and administrative obstacles have also
served to slow land transportation.
According to the United Nations organization, in
a more uncertain and more regionalized global
economy, it is crucial that regional integration
be intensified. To achieve this, it is necessary
to foster regional value chains in strategic
sectors, taking advantage of the scale that a
market of 650 million inhabitants offers; promote
the agenda of "paperless trade" and a common
digital market; reduce the region's vulnerability
to external shocks; and bring about a more
symmetrical dialogue with the United States, China
and Europe.
The report indicates that in order to build back
better, Latin America and the Caribbean must
reduce its internal costs and promote efficient,
smooth and secure logistics through a redesigned
investment strategy, greater interoperability of
services, regional integration, and the promotion
of logistical intelligence.
"In the current context of heightened
uncertainty, the region's countries should take
actions that allow them to reduce their internal
logistical costs and produce services with
value-added to increase their competitiveness.
These measures must be implemented in coordination
with other economic and social measures to foster
an economic recovery with social and environmental
benefits," Alicia Bárcena added.
For the full report click
here.
This article was published in
Volume 50 Number 33 - September 5, 2020
Article Link:
Plight of Foreign Trade in Latin America and Caribbean Due to Pandemic - Economic Commission for Latin
America and the Caribbean
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
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