G20 international merchandise trade. Quarterly percentage changes based on seasonally adjusted figures, in current
prices and US dollars
Covid-19 containment measures introduced in many countries in March 2020 hit G20 merchandise trade hard in the first
quarter of 2020. Compared with the fourth quarter of 2019, exports fell by 4.3% and imports by 3.9%, and now stand at
their lowest levels since the second quarter of 2017. Early indications for April point to more precipitous falls in the
second quarter, with Korean and Japanese exports, for example, falling 21.5% and 10.6%, respectively, compared with
March 2020.
The impact on international trade across G20 economies varied widely in the first quarter of 2020 due to differences in
the rate of the spread of Covid-19, in containment strategies, and in the extent of their exposure to other countries
affected by the lockdowns.
France, India, Italy and the United Kingdom, which all introduced nationwide lockdowns in March, saw their exports fall
by 7.1%, 9.2%, 4.9% and 7.8% respectively while imports fell by 7.0%, 2.3%, 5.6% and 6.5% respectively. German trade
fared slightly better than in other G20 European Union economies, with exports and imports falling by only 3.5% and 2.4%
respectively.
In China, exports dropped by 9.3% and imports by 7.0% in the first quarter of 2020, while in Japan exports fell 4.0% and
imports were down 4.4%. Trade held up reasonably well in Korea (exports rose by 3.3% while imports contracted 1.2%),
although with considerable volatility during the quarter reflecting disruption to Asian supply chains following the
initial outbreak of the epidemic in China.
Australia’s exports fell by 3.7%, reflecting reduced demand from Asian partners. At the same time, Russian and Saudi
Arabian exports fell, by 9.9% and 10.2% respectively, following the collapse in oil prices.
In Canada and the United States exports fell by 4.2% and 1.9% respectively, but Mexico’s exports saw a slight increase
(1.0%). Brazil, which was initially less exposed in the first quarter of 2020 to the Covid-19 outbreak than most other
G20 economies, bucked the general trend with exports and imports marginally up (by 0.9% and 2.8%).