Overview: This page contains the latest trade data of Trailers. In 2018, Trailers were the world's 127th most traded product, with a total trade of $29.8B. Between 2017 and 2018 the exports of Trailers grew by 16.6%, from $25.5B to $29.8B. Trade in Trailers represent 0.16% of total world trade.
Top Destination Growth (2017 - 2018): United States, $778M
Between 2017 and 2018, the exports of Trailers grew the fastest in Germany ($924M), United States ($556M), China ($456M), Mexico ($381M), and Poland ($266M).
Between 2017 and 2018, the fastest growing importers of Trailers were United States ($778M), Canada ($444M), Poland ($368M), Germany ($350M), and France ($271M).
This map shows which countries export or import more of Trailers. Each country is colored based on the difference in exports and imports of Trailers during 2018.
In 2018, the countries that had a largest trade value in exports than in imports of Trailers were China ($4.38B), Germany ($4.18B), Mexico ($1.07B), Turkey ($474M), and Hungary ($358M).
In 2018, the countries that had a largest trade value in imports than in exports of Trailers were Canada ($2.3B), France ($788M), Russia ($750M), Australia ($499M), and Japan ($451M).
In 2018, the average tariff for importing Trailers was 10.8%. The countries with the highest tariffs for importing Trailers were Maldives (32.4%), Iran (28.7%), Romania (25.7%), Bermuda (25%), and Brazil (24.8%).
The Complexity-Relatedness diagram compares the risk and the strategic value of a product's potential export opportunities. Relatedness is predictive of the probability that a country increases its exports in a product. Complexity, is associated with higher levels of income, economic growth potential, lower income inequality, and lower emissions.