UNCTAD: Ukraine war hammering global trade and development

UNCTAD: Ukraine war hammering global trade and development

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World Food Programme (WFP) staff members load bags of split yellow peas into a truck in a WFP warehouse based in El Fasher, North Darfur, to deliver in camps for displaced people (IDP) in Shangil Tobaya, North Darfur. Photo by Albert Gonzalez Farran, UNAMID.
  • Rising food, fuel and fertilizer prices around the world confirm war’s worsening impact, says UNCTAD 
  • UNCTAD does not rule out risk of civil unrest, food shortages and inflation-induced recessions due to pandemic-weakened state of global economy and developing world 
  • The most vulnerable to the shock are the poorest households that spend most of their income on food, says UNCTAD Secretary-General

A rapid assessment by UNCTAD of the war in Ukraine’s impact on trade and development confirms a rapidly worsening outlook for the world economy, underpinned by rising food, fuel and fertilizer prices.

The report, published on March 16, also shows heightened financial volatility, sustainable development divestment, complex global supply chain reconfigurations and mounting trade costs.

“The war in Ukraine has a huge cost in human suffering and is sending shocks through the world economy,” UNCTAD Secretary-General Rebecca Grynspan said in a statement.

“All these shocks threaten the gains made towards recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and block the path towards sustainable development.”

Concern abounds over the two fundamental “Fs” of commodity markets – food and fuels.

Ukraine and Russia are global players in agri-food markets, representing 53% of global trade of sunflower oil and seeds and 27% of global trade of wheat.

This rapidly evolving situation is especially alarming for developing nations. As many as 26 African countries, including some least developed countries, import more than one third of their wheat from the two countries at war. For 17, the share is over hal

“Long-standing effects of rising food prices are hard to predict,” the report says, but an UNCTAD analysis of historical data sheds light on some troubling possible trends.

Agri-food commodity cycles, for example, have coincided with major political events, such as the 2007-2008 food riots and the 2011 Arab Spring.

“Soaring food and fuel prices will affect the most vulnerable in developing countries, putting pressure on the poorest households which spend the highest share of their income on food, resulting in hardship and hunger,” Ms. Grynspan said.

According to UNCTAD calculations, on average, more than 5% of the poorest countries’ import basket is composed of the products that are likely to face a price hike due to the war. The share is below 1% for richer countries.

The risk of civil unrest, food shortages and inflation-induced recessions cannot be discounted, the report says, particularly given the fragile state of the global economy and the developing world due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

strictive measures on airspace, contractor uncertainty and security concerns are complicating all trade routes going through Russia and Ukraine. The two countries are a key geographical component of the Eurasian Land Bridge.

In 2021, a total of 1.5 million containers of cargo were shipped by rail west from China to Europe. If the volumes currently going by container rail were added to the Asia-Europe ocean freight demand, this would mean a 5% to 8% increase in an already congested trade route.

“Due to higher fuel costs, rerouting efforts and zero capacity in maritime logistics, the impact of the war in Ukraine can be expected to lead to even higher freight rates,” the report says. Such increases would have a significant impact on economies and households.

In 2021, UNCTAD simulated that the freight rate increase during the pandemic raised global consumer prices by 1.5%, “with particularly oversized effects in vulnerable economies such as small island developing states, landlocked developing states and least developed countries.”

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