Reuters — The head of the United Nations said on Wednesday that the global trade system was facing major challenges due to tariffs, with developing countries worst affected.
Why it matters: Canadian farmers are caught in the crossfire of the global trade uncertainty.
“The rules-based trading system is at risk of derailment,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told delegates at the U.N. Trade and Development conference in Geneva on Oct. 22, pointing to concerns about trade wars and rising trade barriers.
Read Also

U.S. grains: Soybean futures inch higher on China trade optimism
U.S. soybean futures firmed on Wednesday as traders remained hopeful for progress in trade talks with top soy buyer China and on a Japanese proposal to increase U.S. soy purchases, deals that could help U.S. farmers avert major losses.
U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff decisions since he took office in January have shocked financial markets and sent a wave of uncertainty through the global economy.
On Aug. 7, Trump imposed higher tariffs on imports from dozens of countries, leaving major trade partners scrambling for a better deal.
“Supply chains are in turmoil, and trade barriers are rising, with some least developed countries facing extortionate tariffs of 40 per cent despite representing barely one per cent of global trade flows,” Guterres said.
While the EU has struck a deal setting duties at 15 per cent on most goods it exports to the U.S., they are often much higher on so-called least developed countries. Laos, for example, faces tariffs at 40 per cent.
Earlier this month the World Trade Organization sharply lowered its 2026 forecast for global merchandise trade volume growth to 0.5 per cent, citing the expected delayed impact of U.S. tariffs.
It marked a significant revision down from its previous estimate in August of 1.8 per cent growth.
Trump’s tariff policies have also put pressure on global trade rules agreed under the World Trade Organization.
In April, a former WTO boss said the future terms of global trade could be decided outside the 30-year-old international watchdog unless it reforms itself fast.
— Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin