Antigua and Barbuda - Merchandise exports (current US$)

The value for Merchandise exports (current US$) in Antigua and Barbuda was 22,000,000.00 as of 2020. As the graph below shows, over the past 60 years this indicator reached a maximum value of 99,000,000.00 in 2014 and a minimum value of 0.00 in 1966.

Definition: Merchandise exports show the f.o.b. value of goods provided to the rest of the world valued in current U.S. dollars.

Source: World Trade Organization.

See also:

Year Value
1960 2,000,000.00
1961 2,000,000.00
1962 3,000,000.00
1963 4,000,000.00
1964 2,000,000.00
1965 1,000,000.00
1966 0.00
1967 1,000,000.00
1968 7,000,000.00
1969 6,000,000.00
1970 11,000,000.00
1971 16,000,000.00
1972 18,000,000.00
1973 26,000,000.00
1974 29,000,000.00
1975 20,000,000.00
1976 9,000,000.00
1977 7,000,000.00
1978 13,000,000.00
1979 37,000,000.00
1980 26,000,000.00
1981 40,000,000.00
1982 21,000,000.00
1983 20,000,000.00
1984 18,000,000.00
1985 17,000,000.00
1986 20,000,000.00
1987 19,000,000.00
1988 17,000,000.00
1989 16,000,000.00
1990 21,000,000.00
1991 50,000,000.00
1992 65,000,000.00
1993 62,000,000.00
1994 44,000,000.00
1995 53,000,000.00
1996 38,000,000.00
1997 38,000,000.00
1998 36,000,000.00
1999 38,000,000.00
2000 52,000,000.00
2001 41,000,000.00
2002 39,000,000.00
2003 45,000,000.00
2004 57,000,000.00
2005 83,000,000.00
2006 74,000,000.00
2007 59,000,000.00
2008 65,000,000.00
2009 51,000,000.00
2010 46,000,000.00
2011 56,000,000.00
2012 63,000,000.00
2013 69,000,000.00
2014 99,000,000.00
2015 66,000,000.00
2016 61,000,000.00
2017 21,000,000.00
2018 26,000,000.00
2019 38,000,000.00
2020 22,000,000.00

Limitations and Exceptions: Exports are recorded as the cost of the goods delivered to the frontier of the exporting country for shipment - the free on board (f.o.b.) value. Countries may report trade according to the general or special system of trade. Under the general system exports comprise outward-moving goods that are (a) goods wholly or partly produced in the country; (b) foreign goods, neither transformed nor declared for domestic consumption in the country, that move outward from customs storage; and (c) goods previously included as imports for domestic consumption but subsequently exported without transformation. Under the special system exports comprise categories a and c. In some compilations categories b and c are classified as re-exports. Because of differences in reporting practices, data on exports may not be fully comparable across economies. Data on exports of goods are derived from the same sources as data on imports. In principle, world exports and imports should be identical. Similarly, exports from an economy should equal the sum of imports by the rest of the world from that economy. But differences in timing and definitions result in discrepancies in reported values at all levels.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Merchandise trade data are from customs reports of goods moving into or out of an economy or from reports of financial transactions related to merchandise trade recorded in the balance of payments. Because of differences in timing and definitions, trade flow estimates from customs reports and balance of payments may differ. Several international agencies process trade data, each correcting unreported or misreported data, leading to other differences. The data on total exports of goods (merchandise) are from the World Trade Organization (WTO), which obtains data from national statistical offices and the IMF's International Financial Statistics, supplemented by the Comtrade database and publications or databases of regional organizations, specialized agencies, economic groups, and private sources (such as Eurostat, the Food and Agriculture Organization, and country reports of the Economist Intelligence Unit). Country websites and email contact have improved collection of up-to-date statistics, reducing the proportion of estimates. The WTO database now covers most major traders in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, which together with high-income countries account for nearly 95 percent of world trade. Reliability of data for countries in Europe and Central Asia has also improved.

Aggregation method: Gap-filled total

Periodicity: Annual

Classification

Topic: Private Sector & Trade Indicators

Sub-Topic: Exports