Off the wire
Interview: Myanmar president pledges to build better relations with China  • World champ Sun wins national title with world's fastest time of the year  • China calls for restraint regarding Korean Peninsula situation  • Iran, Oman launch joint rescue, relief drills  • Gambia's president promises to release 25 mln USD to farmers  • Two female bombers killed in abortive Nigeria attacks  • Kenya's forex reserves hit record 8 bln USD on inflows from external lenders  • China, ASEAN keen to deepen cooperation after 25 years of being dialogue partners  • UNHCR calls on EU states to suspend transfers of asylum-seekers to Hungary  • Chinese premier congratulates Serbian president-elect  
You are here:   Home

IMF, World Bank, WTO urge nations to advance open trade

Xinhua, April 10, 2017 Adjust font size:

Several global financial institutions on Monday urged economies all over the world to advance open trade in an inclusive way.

"The role of trade in the global economy is at a critical juncture," said a joint report released by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and the World Trade Organization (WTO).

Increased trade integration has helped to drive economic growth, enhance productivity, lower prices and improve living standards, said the report.

However, trade is leaving many individuals and communities behind, notably in advanced economies, it said.

These economies have been incompetent in addressing trade shocks such as job losses, though job losses in certain sectors or regions have resulted from technological changes to a large extent, rather than from trade, said the report.

In face of trade shocks and the absence of policies as countermeasures, the public has become more skeptical about the benefits of open trade, especially in advanced economies, it said.

It also noted that the sharp slowdown in global trade in recent years is both a symptom of and a contributor to low economic growth, and that trade openness has slowed down sharply in recent years as trade restrictions in some areas remain high and new restrictions continue to grow since the global financial crisis.

The report called on economies to improve social safety nets and labor market policies, such as job search assistance and training programs.

It called for further trade integration by lowering restrictions on agricultural trade, reforming services and digital trade, upgrading bilateral and regional trade agreements, and mitigating trade adjustment costs.

It also emphasized the importance of the WTO in the global trading system, saying that its dispute settlement function has proved to be a powerful tool for enforcing trade rules. Endi