๐ฐ World Trade Growth Slows in 2026 – WTO
➡️ The World Trade Organization (WTO) reports that global trade growth is expected to slow significantly in 2026, largely due to the ongoing Middle East geopolitical crisis and energy market pressures. Global merchandise trade expansion is forecast to drop to around 1.9 % or lower this year, down from stronger growth in 2025. Rising energy costs and conflict‑related risks are cited as key factors weighing on global commerce.
⚠️ Middle East Conflict Influencing Global Trade
➡️ WTO officials warn that the war in the Middle East is clouding the global trade outlook, especially by increasing freight and insurance costs and disrupting supply chains — trends that could ripple into multiple markets beyond energy alone.
➡️ There are also concerns that prolonged conflict might slow global economic expansion even further and negatively impact food security and commodity flows.
๐ What This Means for Iraq’s International Status
Although these WTO reports don’t single out Iraq specifically, the broad implications matter for Iraq’s role in global trade:
๐ 1. Iraq as an Energy Exporter
Iraq is a major oil producer in global markets. Slower global trade growth and higher energy prices can:
- Boost Iraq’s export revenues when oil prices are strong,
- Increase its strategic importance as the world seeks stable energy supplies,
- Strengthen diplomatic and economic bargaining power with trading partners.
In other words, Iraq’s importance in energy markets can enhance its international role — even amid slower overall trade growth.
๐ 2. Global Trade Slowdown ≠ Economic Contraction
Even though WTO forecasts show slower growth, a slowdown is not the same as negative growth — and it creates opportunities for countries that:
- Build resilience through diversified trade,
- Develop stronger regional partnerships,
- Expand non‑oil exports like services, agriculture, and infrastructure.
This gives Iraq a chance to push for deeper trade ties, potentially through WTO‑aligned reforms and agreements over time.
๐ก How This Could Affect the Iraqi Dinar Long‑Term (Positive View)
๐ 1. Stronger International Status, Better Trade Position
If Iraq can:
- Maintain steady oil exports,
- Expand its trade network (both regionally and globally),
- Pursue WTO‑friendly economic reforms,
Then global confidence in Iraq’s economy could grow over the long term — a factor that supports currency stability or eventual strengthening.
A stronger global reputation as a reliable trade partner can lead to:
- Higher foreign investment,
- More foreign reserves,
- Greater confidence in economic management.
All of these are positive foundations for the Iraqi Dinar’s long‑term strength.
๐ 2. Higher Export Revenues
Even with slower global trade, elevated energy prices — which often accompany geopolitical disruptions — can boost Iraq’s oil revenue. Higher revenue supports:
- fiscal budgets,
- external reserves,
- currency stability.
A more robust economic position can help the Central Bank manage the currency with confidence.
๐ 3. WTO Alignment & Global Integration
As global trade grows more complex and interconnected, alignment with WTO standards and broader trade integration can:
- deepen Iraq’s economic links,
- enhance legal protections for investors,
- encourage more stable inward capital flows.
Such integration often correlates with currency credibility and gradual strengthening over time.
✨ Optimistic Long‑Term Takeaway
✔ While WTO forecasts indicate slower global trade growth in 2026,
✔ Iraq’s role as an energy supplier positions it as strategically valuable,
✔ Continued international engagement and economic reform could help Iraq enhance its global standing,
✔ And a stronger economic foundation can support greater confidence in the Iraqi Dinar over the long run.
๐ In other words, short‑term trade headwinds don’t preclude long‑term opportunities — and Iraq’s strategic export base and potential for broader economic integration could help lay the groundwork for future economic and currency resilience.
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World trade growth set to slow to 1.9% this year, Iran war may weigh more, says WTO
GENEVA,(Reuters) - Growth in world trade in goods will slow down markedly to 1.9% this year from 4.6% in 2025 and could decelerate even more if the Middle East war continues to push energy prices higher and disrupt global transport, a World Trade Organization report said on Thursday.
Last year a surge in artificial intelligence-related trade and goods front-loading to avoid a slew of U.S. tariffs enabled a better-than-expected growth performance.
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If crude oil and liquefied natural gas prices remain high throughout 2026 due to the conflict, global trade in goods could slow further to 1.4%, WTO economists said.
A prolonged blockade of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran, choking one-third of fertilizer urea imports, risks hitting major producers like India, Thailand, Brazil, fuelling food security risks, the WTO report said.
Services trade also faces a 0.7-point drop from growth forecasts of 4.8% to 4.1% due to shipping and flights disruption, the report found. Last year services trade grew by 5.3%.
CONTINUED AI TRADE GROWTH A "BIG QUESTION MARK"
Trade in AI-enabling goods accounted for 42% of global trade growth in 2025, despite representing only one-sixth of global trade. It increased by 21.9% year-on-year to $4.18 trillion in 2025, according to the report.
However, the ongoing strength of investment in the sector is "a big question mark for 2026 and beyond," the report said.
This year, goods and services trade and global GDP are forecast to grow at around the same rate - of 2.7% for trade and 2.8% for GDP - following last year's respective growth of 4.7% and 2.9%.
Asia will lead merchandise import growth in 2026 with imports up 3.3% and exports up 3.5%, followed by Africa with 3.2% imports, 1.2% exports, the WTO forecasts. North America will stay flat at 0.3% imports, the report estimates.
Okonjo-Iweala said this figure served as a lesson ahead of the WTO's conference in Cameroon next week where trade ministers will meet to discuss reforms to the global trade body, that the rules-based system "may be battered, but it is far from broken".
Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin, editing by Andrei Khalip
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.