East Asia & Pacific (excluding high income) | Merchandise exports (current US$)

Merchandise exports show the f.o.b. value of goods provided to the rest of the world valued in current U.S. dollars. 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.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
East Asia & Pacific (excluding high income)
Records
63
Source
East Asia & Pacific (excluding high income) | Merchandise exports (current US$)
6235309982.4112 1960
5484055534.6367 1961
5182330546.1139 1962
5570699534.7192 1963
5950913793.905 1964
6449371629.674 1965
6665471959.2916 1966
6274044947.154 1967
6456507017.9161 1968
7044666877.3 1969
7382068807.0332 1970
8142497325.4047 1971
10067013468.415 1972
16814032721.902 1973
25623179177.353 1974
24745526423.576 1975
28279582285.767 1976
33547537490.786 1977
39224248507.959 1978
53614287909.904 1979
69005320348.097 1980
72457636553.283 1981
72449635820.479 1982
72846672185.907 1983
81508465538.49 1984
77432092174.545 1985
79367269421.658 1986
96868872431.726 1987
116721690794.75 1988
134294547563.7 1989
155615587076.23 1990
179821767254.5 1991
209372207993.51 1992
232556338341.48 1993
288945087588.82 1994
354511788216.8 1995
369167944828.51 1996
415925444466.47 1997
406447343186.05 1998
443755741853.48 1999
541844790006.44 2000
531645681021.53 2001
608006496992.49 2002
753482051504.8 2003
964348065918.7 2004
1189313081296.4 2005
1467502100312.2 2006
1787992122219.5 2007
2083596142425.7 2008
1747631119460.6 2009
2279212155797.2 2010
2733099186823 2011
2897746198077.5 2012
3073187210069.9 2013
3234277221081.3 2014
3101423212000 2015
2924021199873.6 2016
3220298220125.8 2017
3532802241487.2 2018
3545573242360.2 2019
3625111247797.1 2020
4636365316922.1 2021
5052356345357.4 2022

East Asia & Pacific (excluding high income) | Merchandise exports (current US$)

Merchandise exports show the f.o.b. value of goods provided to the rest of the world valued in current U.S. dollars. 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.
Publisher
The World Bank
Origin
East Asia & Pacific (excluding high income)
Records
63
Source