Merchandise imports from high-income economies (% of total merchandise imports) - Country Ranking - Europe

Definition: Merchandise imports from high-income economies are the sum of merchandise imports by the reporting economy from high-income economies according to the World Bank classification of economies. Data are expressed as a percentage of total merchandise imports 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 Luxembourg 97.03 2020
2 San Marino 96.66 2020
3 Austria 87.98 2020
4 Sweden 87.43 2020
5 Slovak Republic 87.28 2020
6 Ireland 87.22 2020
7 Denmark 84.40 2020
8 Latvia 83.53 2020
9 Portugal 83.00 2020
10 Belgium 82.78 2020
11 France 82.17 2020
12 Estonia 82.07 2020
13 Czech Republic 81.69 2020
14 Finland 81.57 2020
15 Germany 80.82 2020
16 Iceland 80.36 2020
17 Hungary 80.22 2020
18 Croatia 79.78 2020
19 Malta 78.78 2020
20 Lithuania 78.56 2020
21 Switzerland 76.60 2020
22 Poland 76.59 2020
23 Romania 76.34 2020
24 Slovenia 76.27 2020
25 Cyprus 74.93 2020
26 Italy 72.64 2020
27 Spain 71.14 2020
28 Norway 71.12 2020
29 United Kingdom 70.48 2020
30 Bulgaria 68.04 2020
31 Bosnia and Herzegovina 65.65 2020
32 Netherlands 65.42 2020
33 North Macedonia 64.61 2020
34 Serbia 63.68 2020
35 Albania 63.64 2020
36 Greece 62.06 2020
37 Ukraine 55.56 2020
38 Turkey 54.70 2020
39 Montenegro 50.68 2020
40 Moldova 50.38 2020
41 Belarus 25.16 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.

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