2023
Exports
$1.31BWorld Rnk 3 / 193
Flag Rnk 104 / 1209
2023
PRODUCT COMPLEXITY IN Electrical Resistors
0.83Rnk 235 / 1025
2023
Imports
$314MWorld Rnk 12 / 215
Flag Rnk 296 / 1209
2023
ECONOMIC COMPLEXITY of Japan
2.07Rnk 1 / 132

About

Exports In 2023, Japan exported $1.31B in Electrical Resistors, making it the 3rd largest exporter of Electrical Resistors in the world. At the same year, Electrical Resistors was the 104th most exported product in Japan. The main destination of Electrical Resistors exports from Japan are: China ($310M), United States ($142M), Hong Kong ($134M), Germany ($110M), and Thailand ($82.6M).

The fastest growing export markets for Electrical Resistors of Japan between 2022 and 2023 were Mexico ($38.2M), India ($23.7M), and Netherlands ($8.25M).

Imports In 2023, Japan imported $314M in Electrical Resistors, becoming the 12th largest importer of Electrical Resistors in the world. At the same year, Electrical Resistors was the 296th most imported product in Japan. Japan imports Electrical Resistors primarily from: China ($158M), United States ($21.9M), Philippines ($20.7M), Vietnam ($18.9M), and Thailand ($16.2M).

The fastest growing import markets in Electrical Resistors for Japan between 2022 and 2023 were Vietnam ($3.72M), United States ($3.38M), and Sweden ($1.13M).

COMPANIES In 2023, leading companies such as Panasonic (38) and Mahle Behr (4) were at the forefront of shipping Electrical Resistors from Japan to the United States.

Latest Trends

November 2024

Subnational Monthly Trade

Time Scale
Flow
Color
EXPORT GROWTH (November 2023 - November 2024)¥186M(1.73%)
IMPORT GROWTH (November 2023 - November 2024)¥319M(8.49%)
MAIN EXPORTER (November 2024)Chiba¥4.49B
MAIN DESTINATION (November 2024)China¥2.41B

This section shows Electrical Resistors's exports and imports data at subnational level for Japan. Click any date in the line plot, any subnational region in the geomap, or any destination or origin country to explore the exports or imports behavior of Electrical Resistors over time.

For full datasets download visit Bulk Download page.

Go to Bulk Download

Subscribe today to OEC pro and access the latest data

Sign Up

Subscribe today to OEC pro and access the latest data

Sign Up

Subscribe today to OEC pro and access the latest data

Sign Up

Historical Data

Trade Balance

Color
EXPORTS (2023)$1.31B
IMPORTS (2023)$314M
NET TRADE (2023)$992M

In 2023, Japan exported $1.31B in Electrical Resistors. The main destinations of Japan exports on Electrical Resistors were China ($310M), United States ($142M), Hong Kong ($134M), Germany ($110M), and Thailand ($82.6M).

In 2023, Japan imported $314M in Electrical Resistors, mainly from China ($158M), United States ($21.9M), Philippines ($20.7M), Vietnam ($18.9M), and Thailand ($16.2M).

Explore Visualizations

Export Destinations (2023)

Import Origins (2023)

Market Growth

Flow
THE FASTEST GROWING Electrical Resistors EXPORT MARKETS FOR Japan WERE (2022 - 2023):
Mexico$38.2M (90.7%)
India$23.7M (117%)
Netherlands$8.25M (31%)
THE FASTEST DECLINING MARKETS FOR THE EXPORT OF Electrical Resistors BY Japan WERE (2022 - 2023):
China-$165M (-34.8%)
Hong Kong-$42.8M (-24.2%)
United States-$24.4M (-14.7%)

Change in Exports by Market (2022 - 2023)

Market Concentration

View
Flow
Type
In 2023, Japan's main exporting competitors in Electrical Resistors were:
China $2.63B
Germany $1.31B
In 2023, Japan's main importing competitors in Electrical Resistors were:
China $1.39B
Germany $1.07B

Explore Visualizations

Trade Value of Electrical Resistors by Exporters

Potential Exports

Potential Exports

Flow
View
TOP EXPORT POTENTIALChina+ $20.3M
TOP IMPORT POTENTIALChina+ $25.6M

Electrical Resistors’s highest export potential is China. With an export gap of $20.3M.   Electrical Resistors’s highest import potential is China with an import gap of $25.6M.

See methodology.

Subscribe today to OEC pro and access the latest data

Sign Up

Have questions, comments, or concerns?
Send us an e-mail: support@oec.world
Follow @OECtoday on
Created, Designed, and Developed by:
In collaboration with