Statistics Explained

Archive:European Neighbourhood Policy - South - international trade in goods statistics

Revision as of 09:12, 30 August 2016 by EXT-S-Allen (talk | contribs)
Data extracted in August 2016. Most recent data: Further Eurostat information, Main tables and Database. Planned article update: August 2017.

This article is part of an online publication and provides data on statistics covering international trade in goods for the 10 countries that form the European Neighbourhood Policy-South (ENP-South) region, namely, Algeria, Egypt, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Palestine, Syria and Tunisia. The article highlights some of the key indicators for tracing developments in international trade, with information on exports, imports and the trade balance. It also presents an analysis of international trade by selected product groups (based on the SITC) and an analysis of the ENP-South countries’ trade positions with the European Union (EU).

Table 1: International trade in goods, 2005, 2010 and 2015
(million EUR)
Source: Eurostat (ext_lt_intratrd) and (med_ecet)
Table 2: Exports by broad group of goods, 2015
(% of total exports)
Source: Eurostat (ext_lt_intratrd) and (med_ecet)
Table 3: Imports by broad group of goods, 2015
(% of total imports)
Source: Eurostat (ext_lt_intratrd) and (med_ecet)
Figure 1: Trade in goods with the EU-28, 2015 (1)
(% of reporting country's total exports and imports accounted for by the EU-28)
Source: Eurostat (med_ecet)

Main statistical findings

Trade balance

Algeria was the only ENP-South country that did not record a trade deficit in 2014

The EU-28 ran a trade surplus for goods with non-member countries in 2015, valued at EUR 64.0 billion. By contrast, all of the ENP-South countries for which data are available recorded trade deficits in 2015, with the exception of Israel. Imports of goods exceeded exports by as much as EUR 47.4 billion in Egypt, while Morocco (2014 data) and Algeria recorded trade deficits of more than EUR 10 billion. By contrast, exports of goods from Israel were valued at EUR 1.8 billion more than its imports (see Table 1).The EU-28’s exports of goods increased by 71 % in current price terms over the period 2005–15, while imports increased by 46 %, the difference in these growth rates moving the EU-28 from a trade deficit for goods to a trade surplus. There was also an expansion in the level of both imports and exports across nearly all of the ENP-South countries (for which data are available) during this period, despite sometimes large reductions in international trade during the financial and economic crisis; the one exception was a fall of 15 % in Algerian exports (which are dominated by mineral fuels (petroleum and gas), lubricants and related materials). Particularly strong export growth between 2005 and 2015 was recorded in Palestine (2005–14) and Egypt where the value of exports more than doubled, while exports from Morocco (2005–14) doubled. Elsewhere among the ENP-South countries for which recent data are available (no recent data available for Lebanon, Libya or Syria), exports increased by at least 50 %.

The value of imports increased more than four-fold in Egypt between 2005 and 2015, while it nearly trebled in Algeria and approximately doubled in Morocco and Palestine (both 2005–14); the smallest increase in imports was recorded in Israel, where the value of imports rose by 54 %. All of the ENP-South countries recorded imports expanding at a faster pace than in the EU-28 during the 10-year period shown in Table 1.

The result of these developments for exports and imports was that Algeria’s trade surplus in 2005 turned into a deficit by 2015 and Israel’s deficit turned into a surplus. All other ENP-South countries for which data are available reported larger trade deficits in 2015 (or the nearest available year) than in 2005, most notably Egypt and Morocco.

Trade in goods analysed by broad group of product

There were considerable differences in the structure of the exports from ENP-South countries and those from the EU-28. The principal export categories for the EU-28 in 2015 included machinery and vehicles (42.0 % of all goods exported), other manufactured goods (22.5 %) and chemicals (17.6 %); together these three groups accounted for just over four fifths (82.1 %) of the total value of EU-28 exports in 2015 (see Table 2). By contrast, mineral fuels, lubricants and related goods accounted for almost all of the value of exports from Algeria in 2015 and more than one sixth of the exports from Egypt. The percentage of exports accounted for by food, drinks and tobacco was highest in Palestine (20.4 %, 2014 data), Egypt and Jordan (both 19.6 %) where this category represented approximately three times the share recorded in the EU-28 (6.3 % of total exports); in Morocco (2014 data), the share of exports in this category was also close to three times the share in the EU-28, at 17.8 %. Other manufactured goods accounted for nearly three fifths of the total exports from Palestine in 2014 and for more than two fifths of the total in Israel. Exports of chemicals accounted for just under three tenths of the total value of goods exported from Jordan in 2015.

Table 3 shows that the structure of imports was broadly comparable across most of the ENP-South countries and in relation to the EU-28. The three largest categories of imports (in value terms) were generally mineral fuels, lubricants and related goods; machinery and vehicles; other manufactured goods. Together these three groups accounted for just over three quarters (76.1 %) of the EU-28’s imports in 2015. A similar pattern was observed for some of the ENP-South countries, although there were exceptions. In Algeria imports of mineral fuels, lubricants and related goods were particularly low, as were imports of machinery and vehicles in Palestine, such that food, drink and tobacco appeared amongst the top three product groups in both of these countries. The share of mineral fuels, lubricants and related goods in total imports was also relatively low in Egypt, Israel and Jordan, with the shares for food, drink and tobacco being higher in Egypt and Jordan and for chemicals in Israel. The relatively low share of mineral fuels, lubricants and related goods among imports in several ENP-South countries may, among other factors, be attributed to national supplies/endowments of energy sources, less demand for energy to heat homes, and lower motorisation rates.

Trade between the EU-28 and ENP-South countries

The EU-28 is a key partner for trade in goods with most ENP-South countries

There are generally close links between the EU-28 and many of the ENP-South countries in relation to the international trade of goods. This was particularly true for some of the Maghreb countries: in 2015, the EU-28 accounted for a majority of the total trade (imports plus exports) in goods with Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco (2014 data). By contrast, the EU-28 was relatively less important as a partner for Palestinian international trade (2014 data), while the EU-28’s share of exports from Jordan was also relatively small.

All of the ENP-South countries (for which recent data are available) recorded trade deficits for trade in goods with the EU-28.

Data sources and availability

The data for ENP-South countries are supplied by and under the responsibility of the national statistical authorities of each country on a voluntary basis. The majority of the data presented in this article result from an annual data collection cycle that has been established by Eurostat. In 2015 and 2016, data were not collected from either Libya or Syria. These statistics are available free-of-charge on Eurostat’s website, together with a range of different indicators covering most socio-economic areas. More data may be available from the United Nations’ Comtrade database.

Tables in this article use the following notation:

Value in italics     data value is forecasted, provisional or estimated and is therefore likely to change;
: not available, confidential or unreliable value.
not applicable.

Context

The EU seeks to promote the development of free-trade as an instrument for stimulating economic growth and enhancing competitiveness. International trade statistics are of prime importance for both public sector (international, EU and national decision makers) and private users (in particular, businesses who wish to analyse export market opportunities), as they provide valuable information on developments regarding the exchange of goods between specific geographic areas. These statistics enable the EU to monitor the growth of trade ties with its ENP partners, while they are also used by the European Commission to prepare multilateral and bilateral negotiations for common trade policies.

On 18 November 2015, the High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and the European Commission jointly presented a review of the European Neighbourhood Policy (SWD(2015) 500 final) which underlined a new approach for the EU in relation to its eastern and southern neighbours, based on stabilising the region in political, economic, and security-related terms.

In cooperation with its ENP partners, Eurostat has the responsibility ‘to promote and implement the use of European and internationally recognised standards and methodology for the production of statistics necessary for developing and monitoring policy achievements in all policy areas’. Eurostat undertakes the task of coordinating EU efforts to increase the statistical capacity of the ENP countries. Additional information on the policy context of the ENP is provided here.

See also

Further Eurostat information

Publications

Database

Economy and finance (med_ec)
International trade as a share of gdp (med_ec4)
International trade by SITC - 1 000 EUR (med_ecet)

Dedicated section

Methodology / Metadata

Source data for tables and figures (MS Excel)

External links