Transport services (% of commercial service exports) - Country Ranking

Definition: Transport services (% of commercial service exports) covers all transport services (sea, air, land, internal waterway, space, and pipeline) performed by residents of one economy for those of another and involving the carriage of passengers, movement of goods (freight), rental of carriers with crew, and related support and auxiliary services. Excluded are freight insurance, which is included in insurance services; goods procured in ports by nonresident carriers and repairs of transport equipment, which are included in goods; repairs of railway facilities, harbors, and airfield facilities, which are included in construction services; and rental of carriers without crew, which is included in other services.

Source: International Monetary Fund, Balance of Payments Statistics Yearbook and data files.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Djibouti 81.67 2020
2 Mozambique 79.49 2020
3 Tajikistan 77.33 2020
4 Ethiopia 69.41 2020
5 Kazakhstan 69.38 2020
6 Panama 64.20 2020
7 Azerbaijan 63.40 2020
8 Lithuania 63.17 2020
9 Qatar 61.36 2020
10 Greece 60.84 2020
11 Congo 59.33 2016
12 Uzbekistan 59.05 2020
13 Mongolia 58.97 2020
14 Tanzania 58.94 2020
15 Nigeria 58.12 2020
16 Denmark 56.57 2020
17 Mauritania 55.89 2020
18 Zimbabwe 55.67 2020
19 Bolivia 52.54 2020
20 Egypt 49.61 2020
21 Iran 49.45 2000
22 Oman 49.36 2020
23 Paraguay 47.47 2020
24 Venezuela 47.34 2016
25 Georgia 46.61 2020
26 Norway 43.71 2020
27 Brunei 43.63 2020
28 Belarus 42.79 2021
29 Côte d'Ivoire 42.73 2020
30 Turkey 42.49 2021
31 Fiji 41.29 2020
32 Chile 40.39 2020
33 Benin 39.99 2020
34 Kenya 39.13 2020
35 Sri Lanka 39.01 2020
36 Ecuador 38.85 2020
37 Rwanda 38.65 2020
38 Libya 38.58 2019
39 Togo 37.88 2020
40 Korea 37.80 2021
41 The Gambia 37.05 2021
42 Solomon Islands 36.89 2020
43 Cameroon 36.59 2020
44 Kyrgyz Republic 35.88 2020
45 Hong Kong SAR, China 35.87 2020
46 Russia 34.73 2020
47 Saudi Arabia 34.44 2020
48 Central African Republic 34.07 1993
49 New Caledonia 33.09 2016
50 Latvia 32.75 2021
51 Slovak Republic 32.73 2020
52 Slovenia 32.69 2021
53 Sudan 32.66 2020
54 Peru 31.37 2020
55 Suriname 29.69 2020
56 Singapore 29.68 2021
57 Estonia 29.55 2021
58 Bhutan 28.66 2020
59 Yemen 28.53 2016
60 Romania 28.44 2020
61 Poland 28.17 2020
62 Tunisia 27.98 2020
63 Madagascar 27.94 2020
64 Ukraine 27.40 2021
65 Bangladesh 27.05 2021
66 Bosnia and Herzegovina 26.73 2020
67 Montenegro 26.00 2021
68 Vanuatu 25.33 2020
69 Trinidad and Tobago 25.06 2020
70 Austria 24.76 2020
71 Czech Republic 24.72 2020
72 North Macedonia 24.63 2021
73 Iceland 24.41 2020
74 China 24.34 2020
75 Indonesia 24.22 2021
76 Lao PDR 23.10 2020
77 Hungary 22.74 2020
78 Cyprus 22.47 2020
79 Armenia 21.68 2020
80 Jordan 21.41 2020
81 Belgium 20.93 2020
82 Portugal 20.78 2021
83 Tonga 20.76 2020
84 Bulgaria 20.63 2020
85 Dem. Rep. Congo 20.44 2020
86 Netherlands 20.42 2020
87 Cabo Verde 20.13 2020
88 Brazil 19.88 2021
89 Moldova 19.73 2020
90 Algeria 18.32 2020
91 Eritrea 18.20 2000
92 Morocco 17.97 2020
93 Spain 17.91 2020
94 Malaysia 17.89 2021
95 Colombia 17.82 2021
96 Burkina Faso 17.45 2020
97 Germany 17.33 2020
98 Cambodia 17.21 2020
99 France 17.17 2020
100 Seychelles 16.53 2020
101 South Africa 16.52 2020
102 Serbia 16.20 2020
103 Uganda 16.06 2020
104 Guatemala 15.49 2020
105 Malawi 15.03 2020
106 Afghanistan 14.49 2020
107 Israel 14.07 2021
108 Argentina 13.90 2020
109 Senegal 13.30 2018
110 Japan 13.21 2020
111 Angola 12.73 2020
112 Sierra Leone 12.55 2020
113 Iraq 11.93 2020
114 Kuwait 11.90 2020
115 El Salvador 11.86 2020
116 Italy 11.57 2020
117 Canada 11.54 2021
118 Sweden 11.48 2020
119 Mexico 11.47 2020
120 Namibia 11.37 2020
121 Switzerland 11.32 2020
122 Tuvalu 11.15 2019
123 Pakistan 11.10 2021
124 Botswana 10.94 2020
125 New Zealand 10.81 2020
126 Thailand 10.63 2020
127 Liberia 10.49 2009
128 Finland 10.49 2021
129 India 10.27 2020
130 Mauritius 10.21 2020
131 Lesotho 10.08 2021
132 Croatia 9.38 2020
133 Dominican Republic 9.31 2020
134 Burundi 9.12 2018
135 Uruguay 9.10 2020
136 Niger 8.68 2020
137 Jamaica 8.45 2020
138 Zambia 8.31 2020
139 United States 8.29 2020
140 Albania 8.24 2020
141 Comoros 8.19 2020
142 Samoa 7.57 2020
143 Syrian Arab Republic 7.52 2010
144 Belize 7.50 2020
145 Nauru 7.48 2018
146 Kiribati 7.31 2020
147 Ghana 6.81 2020
148 Costa Rica 6.75 2020
149 Australia 6.59 2020
150 Nicaragua 6.49 2020
151 Antigua and Barbuda 6.29 2020
152 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 6.03 2020
153 United Kingdom 6.02 2020
154 Nepal 5.95 2021
155 Myanmar 5.89 2019
156 Gabon 5.89 2015
157 Palau 5.40 2017
158 Luxembourg 5.34 2021
159 Malta 5.15 2020
160 Honduras 5.05 2020
161 Barbados 4.74 2016
162 Philippines 4.66 2021
163 Chad 4.53 1994
164 Papua New Guinea 4.10 2018
165 São Tomé and Principe 3.87 2020
166 The Bahamas 3.62 2020
167 Cayman Islands 2.94 2019
168 St. Kitts and Nevis 2.84 2020
169 Timor-Leste 2.54 2020
170 Lebanon 2.49 2020
171 Haiti 2.30 2021
172 St. Lucia 1.96 2020
173 Andorra 1.76 2019
174 Bahrain 1.71 2017
175 Grenada 1.53 2020
176 Mali 1.42 2020
177 Macao SAR, China 1.13 2020
178 Ireland 1.03 2020
179 Dominica 1.02 2020
180 Guyana 0.92 2020
181 Guinea-Bissau 0.81 2020
182 Eswatini 0.81 2020
183 Guinea 0.14 2020

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Development Relevance: Trade in services differs from trade in goods because services are produced and consumed at the same time. Thus services to a traveler may be consumed in the producing country (for example, use of a hotel room) but are classified as imports of the traveler's country. In other cases services may be supplied from a remote location; for example, insurance services may be supplied from one location and consumed in another.

Limitations and Exceptions: Balance of payments statistics, the main source of information on international trade in services, have many weaknesses. Disaggregation of important components may be limited and varies considerably across countries. There are inconsistencies in the methods used to report items. And the recording of major flows as net items is common (for example, insurance transactions are often recorded as premiums less claims). These factors contribute to a downward bias in the value of the service trade reported in the balance of payments. Efforts are being made to improve the coverage, quality, and consistency of these data. Eurostat and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, for example, are working together to improve the collection of statistics on trade in services in member countries. Still, difficulties in capturing all the dimensions of international trade in services mean that the record is likely to remain incomplete. Cross-border intrafirm service transactions, which are usually not captured in the balance of payments, have increased in recent years. An example is transnational corporations' use of mainframe computers around the clock for data processing, exploiting time zone differences between their home country and the host countries of their affiliates. Another important dimension of service trade not captured by conventional balance of payments statistics is establishment trade - sales in the host country by foreign affiliates. By contrast, cross-border intrafirm transactions in merchandise may be reported as exports or imports in the balance of payments.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: The balance of payments (BoP) is a double-entry accounting system that shows all flows of goods and services into and out of an economy; all transfers that are the counterpart of real resources or financial claims provided to or by the rest of the world without a quid pro quo, such as donations and grants; and all changes in residents' claims on and liabilities to nonresidents that arise from economic transactions. All transactions are recorded twice - once as a credit and once as a debit. In principle the net balance should be zero, but in practice the accounts often do not balance, requiring inclusion of a balancing item, net errors and omissions. The concepts and definitions underlying the data are based on the sixth edition of the International Monetary Fund's (IMF) Balance of Payments Manual (BPM6). Balance of payments data for 2005 onward will be presented in accord with the BPM6. The historical BPM5 data series will end with data for 2008, which can be accessed through the World Development Indicators archives. The complete balance of payments methodology can be accessed through the International Monetary Fund website (www.imf.org/external/np/sta/bop/bop.htm).

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual