Germany - Net current transfers

Net secondary income (BoP, current US$)

The latest value for Net secondary income (BoP, current US$) in Germany was ($59,166,150,000) as of 2020. Over the past 49 years, the value for this indicator has fluctuated between ($2,662,840,000) in 1971 and ($59,166,150,000) in 2020.

Definition: Secondary income refers to transfers recorded in the balance of payments whenever an economy provides or receives goods, services, income, or financial items without a quid pro quo. All transfers not considered to be capital are current. Data are in current U.S. dollars.

Source: International Monetary Fund, Balance of Payments Statistics Yearbook and data files.

See also:

Year Value
1971 ($2,662,840,000)
1972 ($3,458,593,000)
1973 ($4,805,506,000)
1974 ($5,325,485,000)
1975 ($6,293,754,000)
1976 ($7,665,754,000)
1977 ($8,125,288,000)
1978 ($9,484,498,000)
1979 ($11,586,020,000)
1980 ($12,504,910,000)
1981 ($11,266,100,000)
1982 ($10,947,400,000)
1983 ($10,020,780,000)
1984 ($10,729,050,000)
1985 ($10,150,550,000)
1986 ($12,745,220,000)
1987 ($16,509,740,000)
1988 ($18,724,190,000)
1989 ($18,531,100,000)
1990 ($21,953,810,000)
1991 ($36,184,670,000)
1992 ($32,991,060,000)
1993 ($34,144,270,000)
1994 ($37,943,990,000)
1995 ($40,302,130,000)
1996 ($36,698,230,000)
1997 ($32,665,940,000)
1998 ($32,491,700,000)
1999 ($28,554,240,000)
2000 ($27,754,670,000)
2001 ($26,150,960,000)
2002 ($27,565,040,000)
2003 ($34,991,830,000)
2004 ($37,225,900,000)
2005 ($39,293,130,000)
2006 ($40,119,610,000)
2007 ($45,753,750,000)
2008 ($49,452,780,000)
2009 ($48,625,180,000)
2010 ($52,955,500,000)
2011 ($48,048,800,000)
2012 ($49,918,770,000)
2013 ($57,702,890,000)
2014 ($54,708,980,000)
2015 ($43,242,450,000)
2016 ($45,083,040,000)
2017 ($57,238,540,000)
2018 ($57,403,370,000)
2019 ($54,267,020,000)
2020 ($59,166,150,000)

Classification

Topic: Economic Policy & Debt Indicators

Sub-Topic: Balance of payments