RESEARCH AND ANALYSIS: WORKING PAPERS

Potential economic effects of a Global Trade Conflict - Projecting the medium-run effects with the WTO Global Trade Model

The WTO Global Trade Model is employed to project the medium-run economic effects of a global trade conflict. The trade conflict scenario is based on recent estimates in the literature of the difference between cooperative and non-cooperative tariffs.

The study provides three main insights. First, the projected macroeconomic effects in the medium run are considerable. A global trade conflict started in 2019 would lead to a reduction in global GDP in 2022 of about 1.96% and a reduction in global trade of about 17% compared to the baseline. For context global GDP fell about 2.1% and global trade 12.4% in the global financial crisis of 2009. Second, behind the single-digit aggregate production effects there are much larger, double-digit sectoral production effects in many countries, leading to a painful adjustment process. In general, a global trade conflict leads to a reallocation of resources away from the most efficient allocation based on comparative advantage. Third, the large swings in sectoral production lead to substantial labour displacement. On average 1.15% and 1.74% of high-skilled and low-skilled workers respectively would leave their initial sector of employment.

No: ERSD-2019-04

Authors: Eddy Bekkers and Robert Teh

Manuscript date: April 2019

Key Words:

Computable general equilibrium (CGE) model, Nash tariffs, revealed comparative advantage /RCA), labour displacement

JEL classification numbers:

B41, C63, F13, F16, F51, F53

back to top

Disclaimer 

This is a working paper, and hence it represents research in progress. The opinions expressed in this paper are those of its author. They are not intended to represent the positions or opinions of the WTO or its members and are without prejudice to members' rights and obligations under the WTO. Any errors are attributable to the author.

Download paper in pdf format (23 pages, 528KB; opens in a new window)