Son Excellence le NABA KOUTOU de MOGTEDO,
Le TANSOABA de TANSOBTENGA,
Les grandes familles KABORE, DIPAMA, OUEDRAOGO, TAPSOBA, TIENDREBEOGO, KAFANDO, ZANGRE, SAWADOGO, BONKOUNGOU à Mogtédo, Tansobtenga, Meguet, Ouagadougou, Koubri, New York, Yamoussoukro et Paris,
Monsieur DIPAMA Paul, ses frères et sœurs TIENDREBEOGO Ruth, Marcel, Samuel, Lazare, David, Daniel, OUANDAOGO Naomie, Benjamin et leur famille.
Monsieur OUEDRAOGO Saïdou, ses frères et sœurs Boubacar, Salamata, Zalissa, Kadyguetou, Nata, Asseta, Safiatou, et Korotimi
Tapsoba Wemba à Mogtedo (Bagrin)
EL HADJI BONTOGO Séni et famille
Monsieur KABORE Sambo et famille
Les Veuves DIPAMA Marie, KAFANDO Marie, OUEDRAOGO Ruth, OUEDRAOGO Ramata à Ouagadougou.
Monsieur TAPSOBA Halidou et sœurs
Les familles alliées YANKINE et LENGANI à Kadpugu, Tangare et Garango
La famille de feu YANKINE Abel à Dapoya,
Les familles alliées TAPSOBA, ZOUNGRANA et OUBDA,
Les enfants :
Madame KABORE Gisèle à Ouagadougou,
Madame TAPSOBA Lydie, Épouse de Wendingoudi TAPSOBA à Ouagadougou,
Mme ZOUNGRANA Tatiana épouse de Gustave ZOUNGRANA en Italie,
Madame OUBDA Sonia épouse de Madi OUBDA en Espagne,
Mademoiselle KABORE Julie à Ouagadougou,
Les petits enfants :
BAMOGO Junior Noel Christian au Canada,
TAPSOBA Cedric et Césaire à Ouagadougou,
ZOUNGRANA Sem Andy, Raphael Franck, Sephora Roxane et Chanel Stella à Ouagadougou,
OUBDA Angelo et Delchrist Nolan à Ouagadougou,
TASSEMBEDO Elsa Alya à Ouagadougou,
Ont la profonde douleur de vous faire part du rappel à Dieu le dimanche 15 février 2026 au Centre Hospitalier Universitaire YALGADO OUEDRAOGO à Ouagadougou, de leur épouse, fille, grande sœur, tante, belle-mère, mère et grand- mère
KABORE née YANKINE Marie Philoté à l'âge de 71 ans.
Programme des obsèques :
LUNDI 16 FEVRIER 2026
16 H LEVEE DU CORPS AU CHU YALGADO POUR LE DOMICILE
19 H VEILLEE ET SOIREE D'HOMMAGE
MARDI 17 FEVRIER 2026
07 H 30 LEVEE DU CORPS AU DOMICILE POUR L'EGLISE EVANGELIQUE DE
TANGHIN BARRAGE
08 H CULTE D'ACTION DE GRACE SUIVI DE L'HUNIMATION
AUX CIMETIERES DE TOUDWEOGO
« J'ai combattu le bon combat, j'ai achevé la course, j'ai gardé la foi. »
2 Timothée 4 :7
A female merchant in Bangkok using her phone as part of her business. Digital technology is a key accelerator of trade growth. Credit: Pexels/Faheem Ahamad
By Witada Anukoonwattaka, Yann Duval, Nikita Shahu and Niccolo Sainati
BANGKOK, Thailand, Feb 16 2026 (IPS)
Trade in the Asia-Pacific region has moved into a new strategic reality. The latest Asia-Pacific Trade and Investment Trends (APTIT) highlights that rapid technological change and a strategic reconfiguration of supply chains are reshaping how economies in the region trade and compete.
Rather than pursuing cost efficiency alone, firms and governments are increasingly prioritizing supply chain resilience, diversification and digital readiness. These forces are altering export performance, changing the geography of trade, and accelerating the rise of digitally driven goods and services across the region
Digital-led trade growth
Export performance reflected this adjustment. Regional export growth slowed sharply from 7.9% in 2024 to 3.3% in 2025 (Figure 1). Additionally, persistent price compression, driven by weak global demand, excess supply and falling commodity prices, pushed the region’s share of global exports down to 39%, extending a decline underway since 2021.
Across subregions, gaps widened. Growth is increasingly concentrated among economies able to capitalize on digital opportunities. South-East Asia and East and North-East Asia outperformed in merchandise trade, supported by their expanding roles in semiconductors, AI-related hardware and advanced digital equipment.
By contrast, exports contracted in South and South-West Asia, where traditional industries remain the backbone of export structures.
A similar pattern emerged in services. In 2025, services exports rose by 5.4%, led overwhelmingly by digitally deliverable services such as ICT, telecommunications, computer services, and business and financial services. These are the functions that enable multinode production, data flows and the coordination of increasingly complex supply networks.
Traditional services such as travel and transport continued to grow but at a slower pace. East and North-East Asia again led regional services’ export expansion.
A shifting geography of trade
The geography of trade is also evolving. For goods, geopolitical risk mitigation is playing a larger role in determining trade routes and partners. Intraregional merchandise trade remains significant with 53% exports and 56% imports, but its share edged down in 2025 as businesses diversified toward extra-regional markets.
Export shares to the European Union and the rest of the world increased, while the United States became a rising destination for most subregions, with the exception of those most directly affected by geopolitical tensions.
Services trade remains more global, with only about 21% of services exports occurring within the region. However, ESCAP analyses point to gradually strengthening intraregional linkages. South-East Asia, for instance, has been redirecting a growing share of its services exports toward East and North-East Asia, reflecting that intra-regional demand for digital coordination functions is increasing within the services trade networks.
Outlook for 2026: Slower growth, higher uncertainty
Looking ahead, the outlook for 2026 remains cautious. Merchandise export volume growth is projected at around 0.6%. Developed economies’ exports are expected to contract by about 1.5% due to their exposure to high-tech supply chains under geopolitical strain and weaker demand in major markets.
Developing Asian economies may show more resilience, but outcomes will hinge on China’s performance and the strength of global technological demand.
Services trade is expected to remain comparatively steady. Digitally deliverable services, especially ICT, computer and business services are likely to continue driving growth. Travel and transport may see gradual improvement, but several risk factors, including policy and regulatory uncertainty in digital trade, climate-related disruptions and increasing compliance burdens for MSMEs, cloud the outlook.
A structural shift, not a temporary distortion
Together, these developments point to a structural transformation in the region’s trade rather than a temporary cycle. On the goods side, firms are reengineering supply chains to build resilience by diversifying markets, relocating stages of production and increasing the share of intermediate goods destined for assembly closer to end markets in the European Union and the United States.
Yet this transition remains delicate: volumes have slowed, margins are compressed, and the region’s global export share continues to slip.
On the services side, digitalization is reshaping growth patterns. The strong growth of ICT, communications, computer and business services reflects the expanding role in supplying digital services, such as data management, logistics platforms and remote business services that keep modern supply chains running
For Asia and the Pacific, particularly its developing economies, future gains will depend on pairing digital transformation with practical resilience strategies. ESCAP’s analyses drawing on RDTII and RIVA point to areas that deserve policymakers’ attention: persistent digital trade regulatory complexity and increasingly dense value chain connections that allow disruptions to spread widely.
These trends underscore the importance of strengthening digital trade cooperation, as well as building resilient logistics and trade facilitation systems to keep intermediate goods moving reliably along supply chains. In this context, increasing participation by countries in the regional UN treaty on facilitation of cross-border paperless trade is a welcome development.
Witada Anukoonwattaka is Economic Affairs Officer, ESCAP; Yann Duval is Chief, Trade Policy and Facilitation Section, ESCAP, Nikita Shahu is Consultant, ESCAP, Niccolo Sainati is Intern, ESCAP.
IPS UN Bureau
Follow @IPSNewsUNBureau
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