Merchandise exports to high-income economies (% of total merchandise exports) - Country Ranking - Asia

Definition: Merchandise exports to high-income economies are the sum of merchandise exports from the reporting economy to high-income economies according to the World Bank classification of economies. Data are expressed as a percentage of total merchandise exports by the economy. Data are computed only if at least half of the economies in the partner country group had non-missing data.

Source: World Bank staff estimates based data from International Monetary Fund's Direction of Trade database.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Macao SAR, China 85.69 2020
2 Cambodia 84.69 2020
3 Bangladesh 73.90 2020
4 Bahrain 72.92 2020
5 Sri Lanka 71.62 2020
6 Philippines 71.53 2020
7 Lebanon 71.05 2020
8 China 68.87 2020
9 Pakistan 68.86 2020
10 Vietnam 67.87 2020
11 Israel 67.63 2020
12 Turkey 64.04 2020
13 Malaysia 61.02 2020
14 India 60.09 2020
15 Japan 58.82 2020
16 Thailand 57.64 2020
17 Kazakhstan 56.89 2020
18 Brunei 56.74 2020
19 Qatar 56.56 2020
20 Azerbaijan 55.96 2020
21 Jordan 55.33 2020
22 Russia 55.16 2020
23 Kyrgyz Republic 53.90 2020
24 Singapore 53.53 2020
25 Saudi Arabia 51.65 2020
26 Indonesia 49.20 2020
27 Timor-Leste 48.81 2020
28 Korea 46.54 2020
29 Tajikistan 46.39 2020
30 Myanmar 40.23 2020
31 Oman 39.36 2020
32 Armenia 36.57 2020
33 United Arab Emirates 36.15 2020
34 Syrian Arab Republic 34.50 2020
35 Hong Kong SAR, China 32.54 2020
36 Iraq 30.52 2020
37 Georgia 22.00 2020
38 Iran 20.95 2020
39 Nepal 20.88 2020
40 Lao PDR 13.66 2020
41 Yemen 11.55 2020
42 Afghanistan 6.71 2020
43 Mongolia 5.93 2020
44 Kuwait 5.48 2020
45 Uzbekistan 5.02 2020
46 Turkmenistan 4.51 2020
47 Dem. People's Rep. Korea 3.97 2020
48 Bhutan 1.54 2020

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Development Relevance: Low- and middle-income economies are an increasingly important part of the global trading system. Trade between high-income economies and low- and middle-income economies has grown faster than trade between high-income economies. This increased trade benefits both producers and consumers in developing and high-income economies. At the regional level most exports from low- and middle-income economies are to high-income economies, but the share of intraregional trade is increasing. Geographic patterns of trade vary widely by country and commodity. Larger shares of exports from oil- and resource-rich economies are to high-income economies.

Limitations and Exceptions: Data on exports and imports are from the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) Direction of Trade database and should be broadly consistent with data from other sources, such as the United Nations Statistics Division's Commodity Trade (Comtrade) database. All high-income economies and major low- and middle-income economies report trade data to the IMF on a timely basis, covering about 85 percent of trade for recent years. Trade data for less timely reporters and for countries that do not report are estimated using reports of trading partner countries. Therefore, data on trade between developing and high-income economies should be generally complete. But trade flows between many low- and middle-income economies - particularly those in Sub-Saharan Africa - are not well recorded, and the value of trade among low- and middle-income economies may be understated.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual