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Rows of newly imported Toyotas fill the 150-acre terminal lot in Long Beach, Calif., in December.
Rows of newly imported Toyotas fill the 150-acre terminal lot in Long Beach, Calif., in December.
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GENEVA — Global trade will shrink by 9 percent this year in the most devastating collapse since World War II, the World Trade Organization said Monday.

The WTO said commerce in rich countries would fall furthest, by about 10 percent. But poorer nations may suffer the most because they are more dependent on exports for growth.

Trade has grown unabated since 1982.

“For the last 30 years, trade has been an ever-increasing part of economic activity, with trade growth often outpacing gains in output,” WTO chief Pascal Lamy said. “The depleted pool of funds available for trade finance has contributed to the significant decline in trade flows, in particular in developing countries.”

The International Monetary Fund has predicted a trade decline of nearly 3 percent, but the WTO’s forecast was far bleaker.

It said the sharp deterioration in trade was already evident late last year as demand sagged and production slowed. Although trade registered 2 percent growth in volume terms, it stagnated over the final six months.

“As a consequence, many thousands of trade-related jobs are being lost,” Lamy said. “The use of protectionist measures is on the rise.”

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