As global trade faces its most turbulent period since World War II, China has stepped up its push for stronger transparency at the World Trade Organization (WTO). At a key meeting this week, Chinese delegates urged all 164 members to fully disclose trade measures – a move seen as crucial for stabilizing markets in 2025.
Why This Matters Now
WTO chief Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala dropped a reality check: 📉 Tariff wars and geopolitical tensions have created “the most severe turbulence in 80 years.” Yet there’s hope – 72% of global trade still flows through standard MFN (Most Favored Nation) channels, showing the system’s resilience.
China’s Stand
🇨🇳 Chinese representatives spotlighted gaps in reporting, particularly calling out delayed notifications from major players like the U.S. “Timely updates aren’t optional – they’re essential for fair play,” stated one delegate during the Trade Policy Review.
By the Numbers
- 💰 $2.64 trillion: Value of recent import trade measures
- 📈 4x increase from previous reports
- 🌍 11.1% of global imports affected
What’s Next?
The EU and other members backed China’s push, with new assessments of trade measures expected by early 2026. As Okonjo-Iweala put it: “Transparency isn’t bureaucracy – it’s crisis prevention.”
For young professionals and entrepreneurs navigating this rocky landscape, one thing’s clear: In 2025’s volatile markets, information is the ultimate currency. 💡
Reference(s):
cgtn.com








