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Global economy faces ‘low normal’ growth, widening inequality gap

services are emerging as a potential growth engine, expanding at 5 percent annually and now accounting for 25 percent of global trade by 2022.
  • While the global South experienced robust annual growth rates of 6.6 percent between 2003 and 2013, that figure has fallen to 4.1 percent over the past decade.
  • This has made it harder for nations to expand social services, cover rising energy transition costs and manage mounting public debt.

Geneva, Switzerland — UN Trade and Development (UNCTAD) projected global economic growth to stagnate at 2.7 percent in 2024 and 2025, marking a sustained drop from the 3 percent annual average seen between 2011 and 2019 and well below the 4.4 percent average in the years before the 2008 financial crisis.

The organization’s Trade and Development Report 2024 warned that this new “low normal” growth is insufficient to tackle pressing development and climate goals or help ease widespread discontent amidst a global cost-of-living crisis that has left many households in vulnerable positions, WAM reported.

While the global South experienced robust annual growth rates of 6.6 percent between 2003 and 2013, that figure has fallen to 4.1 percent over the past decade, making it harder for nations to expand social services, cover rising energy transition costs and manage mounting public debt. Excluding China, the economies of the global South have grown at 2.8 percent on average for the past decade.

High interest rates in advanced economies and depreciating currencies in developing countries are driving up the cost of foreign debt, forcing many governments to redirect export earnings away from development and toward debt payments.

Another key issue is trade’s stalling growth relative to GDP. Between 1995 and 2007, trade grew at twice the rate of global GDP, but since the 2008 financial crisis, that momentum has stalled. In 2023, for the first time in history, merchandise trade contracted (-1.2 percent) despite global economic growth.

Meanwhile, services are emerging as a potential growth engine, expanding at 5 percent annually and now accounting for 25 percent of global trade by 2022.

While this shift brings promise, it also carries risks for global inequalities. Developing countries account for less than 30 percent of global services export revenues.

The uneven playing field is clear in the creative services sector, valued at US$1.4 trillion in 2022, where advanced economies account for 80 percent of exports. The growing importance of intangible assets like brands, software, data and patented technologies in global supply chains heighten the risks further. In 2023, investment in intangible assets grew three times faster than physical assets, reaching $6.9 trillion.

The Trade and Development Report 2024 warned that without bold action, the gap between rich and poor nations will continue to grow, worsening global inequalities, increasing social unrest, and making it harder to combat climate change.

According to the report, developing countries need global support to navigate these challenges, but they must also take the lead in diversifying their economies, adopting new technologies, and building resilience in the face of mounting economic, social, and environmental risks.