Cynnwys
- Main points
- Things you need to know about this release
- Total trade deficit narrowed £16.0 billion in Quarter 2 2019
- Excluding unspecified goods, goods imports fell £10.7 billion in Quarter 2 2019 following increases in Quarter 1 2019
- Removing the effect of inflation, the trade deficit narrowed £17.2 billion in Quarter 2 2019
- Explore UK trade in goods country-by-commodity data for 2018 with our interactive tools
- The total trade deficit widened in the 12 months to June 2019
- The trade in goods deficit widened with non-EU countries and narrowed with EU countries in the 12 months to June 2019
- Links to related statistics
- Quality and methodology
1. Main points
The total trade deficit (goods and services) narrowed £16.0 billion to £4.3 billion in Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019, due largely to falling imports of goods.
Imports of goods decreased £18.0 billion to £120.0 billion in Quarter 2 2019 as imports of unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), chemicals, and machinery and transport equipment fell, following sharp rises in Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2019.
Excluding unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), the trade deficit narrowed £6.2 billion to £4.0 billion in Quarter 2 2019, as imports from EU countries fell following sharp rises in Quarter 1 2019.
Removing the effect of inflation, the total trade deficit narrowed £17.2 billion to £4.4 billion in Quarter 2 2019.
Excluding unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), the total trade balance remained in deficit at £0.6 billion in June 2019; however, including unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), total trade returned a surplus of £1.8 billion.
The total trade deficit widened £19.9 billion to £42.8 billion in the 12 months to June 2019, due mainly to the trade in goods deficit, which widened £14.4 billion to £149.2 billion; the services surplus narrowed by a lesser £5.5 billion to £106.4 billion.
2. Things you need to know about this release
Data revision policy
In accordance with National Accounts Revisions Policy, data in this release have been revised back to April 2019 when compared with our previous trade bulletin from 10 July 2019. Data in this release are consistent with the GDP first quarterly estimate for Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019 also published on 9 August 2019.
National Statistics designation status
The UK Statistics Authority suspended the National Statistics designation of UK trade (PDF 72.8KB) on 14 November 2014. We have now responded to all of the specific requirements of the reassessment of UK trade and are in the final stages of providing evidence to the Authority.
We are undertaking a programme of improvements to UK trade statistics in line with the UK trade development plan, including more detail and improvements now published to address anticipated future demands. On 24 October 2018, we published an article outlining our achievements so far and forward look with regards to the transformation of our trade statistics.
We continue to work with the Office for Statistics Regulation team to regain National Statistics status for UK trade statistics. We welcome feedback on our new trade statistics, developments and future plans. If you have any comments, please send them by email to trade@ons.gov.uk.
UK trade data
Unless otherwise specified, data within this bulletin are in current prices, in other words, they have not been adjusted to remove the effects of inflation.
UK trade data within our monthly trade bulletin are published at around a six-week lag because of the timeliness of source data. For example, the August 2019 publication will include data up to the end of June 2019.
Erratic commodities
Trade statistics for any one month can be erratic. For that reason, we recommend comparing the latest three months against the preceding three months, and the same three months of the previous year.
Oil and other “erratic” commodities can make a large contribution to trade in goods, but often mask the underlying trend in the export or import values due to their volatility. The “erratics” series includes ships, aircraft, precious stones, silver and non-monetary gold. Non-monetary gold can have a particularly large impact because of the large volumes of gold traded on the London markets. Therefore, we also publish data exclusive of these commodities, which may provide a better guide to the emerging trade picture.
Non-monetary gold
In line with international standards, the Office for National Statistics’ (ONS’s) headline trade statistics contain the UK’s exports and imports of non-monetary gold. Non-monetary gold is the technical term for gold bullion not owned by central banks.
Because a significant amount of the world’s trade in non-monetary gold takes place on the London markets, this trade can have a large impact on the size of and change in the UK’s headline trade figures.
Non-monetary gold is one subcomponent of the commodity group “unspecified goods”.
More information about the ONS’s recording of non-monetary gold is available.
Trade asymmetries
These data are our best estimates of bilateral UK trade flows, compiled following internationally agreed standards and using a wide range of robust data sources. However, in some cases alternative estimates of bilateral trade flows are available from the statistical agencies for those countries or through central databases such as UN Comtrade. Differences between estimates are known as trade asymmetries and are a known aspect of international trade statistics, affecting bilateral estimates across the globe, not just the UK.
We are heavily engaged in analysis of these asymmetries, developing strong bilateral relationships with other countries to understand, explain and potentially reduce them. We have published a series of analyses showing comparisons and the relative strengths of different estimates, which users may wish to reference to help them better understand the quality of our bilateral trade estimates.
Blue Book 2019
Each year we produce an annual update to the UK National Accounts in the Blue Book and Pink Book and the associated releases. As already announced, the Blue Book and Pink Book 2019 consistent datasets will be published on 30 September 2019.
Details have already been provided on the scope in the article Latest developments and changes to be implemented in Blue Book and Pink Book 2019. Indicative impacts on headline gross domestic product (GDP) components for the years 1997 to 2016 were published on 27 June 2019 in the article Blue Book 2019 indicative impacts on GDP current price and chained volume measure estimates: 1997 to 2016.
This year, due to the very demanding set of changes being put through in the annual update, we are not going to fully reconcile 2017 annual data, instead producing an indicative balance to allow further time for final quality assurance of the data.
Consequently, the reference year and last base year for all chained volume measure series will remain as 2016.
Nôl i'r tabl cynnwys3. Total trade deficit narrowed £16.0 billion in Quarter 2 2019
The total trade deficit (goods and services) narrowed £16.0 billion to £4.3 billion in Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019, due largely to goods imports, which fell £18.0 billion to £120.0 billion (Figure 1).
Much of the fall in Quarter 2 2019 was due to falling imports of unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), chemicals, and machinery and transport equipment, following increased imports into Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2019.
Figure 1: Falling imports of goods drove the narrowing of the trade deficit in Quarter 2 2019
Changes in the UK trade balances, exports and imports, Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019 compared with Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2019
Source: Office for National Statistics
Notes:
The arrow direction indicates whether a component has increased or decreased, while the colour denotes the impact the direction of a movement has on the trade balance.
For example, an increase in imports is denoted by an upward red arrow, as a rise in imports has a negative impact on the trade balance. An increase in the trade in goods deficit will be indicated by an upwards red arrow as this would have a negative impact on the balance.
Download this image Figure 1: Falling imports of goods drove the narrowing of the trade deficit in Quarter 2 2019
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Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019 compared to Quarter 1 (Jan to March) 2019 | |||
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Exports | Imports | Balance | |
Total trade | Decreased £3.6 billion (2.2%) to £160.6 billion | Decreased £19.6 billion (10.6%) to £164.9 billion | Increased £16.0 billion to £4.3 billion (deficit) |
Trade in goods | Decreased £1.4 billion (1.5%) to £89.6 billion | Decreased £18.0 billion (13.0%) to £120.0 billion | Decreased £16.6 billion to £30.4 billion (deficit) |
Trade in services | Decreased £2.2 billion (3.0%) to £71.0 billion | Decreased £1.6 billion (3.4%) to £44.8 billion | Decreased £0.6 billion to £26.2 billion (surplus) |
Download this table Table 1: The trade deficit narrowed in Quarter 2 2019, due largely to falling imports of goods
.xls .csvThe trade in goods deficit narrowed £16.6 billion to £30.4 billion in Quarter 2 2019 while the services surplus narrowed £0.6 billion to £26.2 billion (Figure 2). Imports of unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold) were a large driver in the narrowing of the trade in goods balance in Quarter 2. Excluding unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), the total trade deficit narrowed £6.2 billion to £4.0 billion, as imports of goods fell more than exports.
Figure 2: The trade deficit narrowed in Quarter 2 2019 after widening in Quarter 1 2019
UK trade balances, Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2017 to Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 2: The trade deficit narrowed in Quarter 2 2019 after widening in Quarter 1 2019
Image .csv .xls4. Excluding unspecified goods, goods imports fell £10.7 billion in Quarter 2 2019 following increases in Quarter 1 2019
Excluding unspecified goods, exports and imports of goods fell in Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019 following increases into Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2019 (Figure 3).
Imports of goods fell £18.0 billion to £120.0 billion in Quarter 2 2019, driving the narrowing of the total trade deficit. Excluding unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), imports fell £10.7 billion to £117.0 billion on the quarter.
Goods exports fell £1.4 billion to £89.6 billion. Excluding unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), exports fell £3.8 billion to £86.8 billion.
Falls in imports in Quarter 2 2019, following the increases in Quarter 1 2019, are consistent with activity being brought forward ahead of the UK’s originally intended departure date from the European Union, but we are unable to quantify the effect of this. Similar activity has been seen elsewhere in the economy, for further information see GDP first quarterly estimate, UK: April to June 2019.
Figure 3: Excluding unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), exports and imports of goods fell in Quarter 2 2019 following sharp increases in Quarter 1 2019
Changes in goods exports, imports and trade balance, Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 1998 to Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 3: Excluding unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), exports and imports of goods fell in Quarter 2 2019 following sharp increases in Quarter 1 2019
Image .csv .xlsImports of unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold) fell £7.3 billion in Quarter 2 2019 (Figure 4), due largely to falling imports of non-monetary gold from non-EU countries.
Excluding unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), EU countries drove falling imports in Quarter 2 2019. Chemical imports fell £4.3 billion in the quarter, £2.5 billion of which was due to falling imports of medicinal and pharmaceutical products from EU countries. These falls in imports of medicinal and pharmaceutical products followed increased imports in Quarter 1 2019.
Imports of machinery and transport equipment fell £3.8 billion, £2.9 billion of which was driven by falling imports of road vehicles and electrical machinery from EU countries.
Figure 4: Excluding unspecified goods, falling imports were driven by EU countries in Quarter 2 2019
Changes in goods imports by top-level commodity group, EU and non-EU split, Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019 compared with Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2019
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 4: Excluding unspecified goods, falling imports were driven by EU countries in Quarter 2 2019
Image .csv .xlsRises in exports of unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold) to non-EU countries partially offset falls in exports of machinery and transport equipment, and chemicals to EU countries (Figure 5). Excluding unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), exports of goods fell £3.8 billion to £86.8 billion in Quarter 2 2019.
Exports of machinery and transport equipment fell £2.9 billion in Quarter 2 2019 due largely to exports to the EU falling £2.0 billion. Falls in exports in this commodity grouping were broad-based with the largest contributors being mechanical machinery and road vehicles.
Chemical exports fell £1.9 billion in Quarter 2 2019, £1.4 billion of which was due to falling exports to EU countries. Exports of medicinal and pharmaceutical products to the EU fell £0.8 billion on the quarter.
Similar to imports, falling exports in Quarter 2 2019 were consistent with activity being brought forward in Quarter 1 2019 ahead of the UK’s originally intended departure from the European Union. While the monthly path for exports increased into March 2019, the increase into March and subsequent fall in April 2019 was smaller than that for imports.
Figure 5: Excluding unspecified goods, falling exports were driven by exports to EU countries in Quarter 2 2019
Changes in UK goods exports by top-level commodity group, by EU and non-EU, Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019 compared with Quarter 1
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 5: Excluding unspecified goods, falling exports were driven by exports to EU countries in Quarter 2 2019
Image .csv .xls5. Removing the effect of inflation, the trade deficit narrowed £17.2 billion in Quarter 2 2019
This section presents volume and price estimates of UK trade exports, imports and balances, using chained volume measures (CVMs) and implied deflators (IDEFs). A CVM is a “real” measure in that it has had the effect of inflation removed. An IDEF shows the implied change in average prices for the respective components of the trade balance, for example, the IDEF for imports will show the average price movement for imports.
In volume terms, the total trade deficit (goods and services) narrowed £17.2 billion to £4.4 billion in Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2019, as the trade in goods deficit narrowed £17.7 billion to £29.8 billion and the trade in services surplus narrowed £0.5 billion to £25.4 billion (Figure 6).
Goods exports decreased £3.0 billion to £79.5 billion in Quarter 2 2019, while goods imports fell by a greater £20.7 billion to £109.3 billion.
Services exports fell £2.1 billion to £66.9 billion, while services imports fell by £1.6 billion to £41.5 billion.
Imports of unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold) from non-EU countries drove the narrowing of the trade deficit in volume terms in Quarter 1 (Jan to Mar) 2019, along with falling imports of chemicals, and machinery and transport equipment from EU countries.
The trade deficit narrowed more in volumes than in current prices in Quarter 2 2019 as import prices on average grew by more than export prices, following falls in both in Quarter 1 2019. Import prices increased 2.6% on average on the quarter, compared with 1.2% for export prices. Increases in import and export prices were driven largely by fuels. The implied deflators for fuels increased 12.7% for exports and 14.2% for imports on the quarter.
Figure 6: The narrowing of the trade deficit in real terms was due mainly to a narrowing of the trade in goods deficit
UK trade balances, chained volume measures, Quarter 2 (Apr to June) 2017 to Quarter 2 2019
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 6: The narrowing of the trade deficit in real terms was due mainly to a narrowing of the trade in goods deficit
Image .csv .xls6. Explore UK trade in goods country-by-commodity data for 2018 with our interactive tools
Explore the 2018 trade in goods data using our interactive tools. Our data breaks down UK trade in goods with 234 countries by 125 commodities.
Use our map to get a better understanding of what goods the UK traded with a particular country. Select a country by hovering over it or using the drop-down menu.
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Notes:
For more information about our methods and how we compile these statistics, please see Trade in goods, country-by-commodity experimental data: 2011 to 2016. Users should note that the data published alongside this release are no longer experimental.
These data are our best estimate of these bilateral UK trade flows. Users should note that alternative estimates are available, in some cases, via the statistical agencies for bilateral countries or through central databases such as UN Comtrade.
Interactive maps denote country boundaries in accordance with statistical classifications set out within Appendix 4 of the Balance of Payments (BoP) Vademecum (PDF, 1.1MB).
What about trade in a particular commodity in 2018? What percentage of UK car exports went to the EU? Where did UK imports of tea and coffee come from last year?
Use our interactive tools to understand UK trade of a particular commodity in 2018.
Select a commodity from the drop-down menu, or click through the levels to explore the data.
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Notes:
For more information about our methods and how we compile these statistics, please see Trade in goods, country-by-commodity experimental data: 2011 to 2016. Users should note that the data published alongside this release are no longer experimental.
These data are our best estimate of these bilateral UK trade flows. Users should note that alternative estimates are available, in some cases, via the statistical agencies for bilateral countries or through central databases such as UN Comtrade.
Interactive maps denote country boundaries in accordance with statistical classifications set out within Appendix 4 of the Balance of Payments (BoP) Vademecum (PDF, 1.1MB).
Nôl i'r tabl cynnwys7. The total trade deficit widened in the 12 months to June 2019
The total trade deficit (goods and services) widened £19.9 billion to £42.8 billion in the 12 months to June 2019, due largely to widening of the trade in goods deficit (Figure 7).
The trade in goods deficit widened £14.4 billion to £149.2 billion in the 12 months to June 2019, as imports of goods increased £29.3 billion to £508.1 billion compared with exports, which rose by a lesser £14.9 billion to £358.9 billion.
The largest contributor to the increase in exports was fuels, which increased £7.1 billion. The increase in imports was driven primarily by unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), machinery and transport equipment, and fuels, which rose £9.5 billion, £5.3 billion and £4.6 billion respectively.
The trade in services surplus narrowed £5.5 billion to £106.4 billion in the 12 months to June 2019, as imports increased £12.4 billion to £181.6 billion, while exports grew by a lesser £6.9 billion to £288.0 billion. The main contributors to the increase in imports of services were other business, financial and travel services.
Figure 7: The trade deficit widened in the 12 months to June 2019, due largely to a widening of the trade in goods deficit in the 12 months to June 2019
Change to UK trade balances, exports and imports, 12 months to June 2019 compared with 12 months to June 2018
Source: Office for National Statistics
Notes:
The arrow direction indicates whether a component has increased or decreased, while the colour denotes the impact the direction of a movement has on the trade balance.
For example, an increase in imports is denoted by an upward red arrow, as a rise in imports has a negative impact on the trade balance. An increase in the trade in goods deficit will be indicated by an upwards red arrow as this would have a negative impact on the balance.
Download this image Figure 7: The trade deficit widened in the 12 months to June 2019, due largely to a widening of the trade in goods deficit in the 12 months to June 2019
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12 months to June 2019 | |||
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Exports | Imports | Balance | |
Total trade | Increased £21.8 billion (3.5%) to £646.8 billion | Increased £41.7 billion (6.4%) to £689.7 billion | Decreased £19.9 billion to £42.8 billion (deficit) |
Trade in goods | Increased £14.9 billion (4.3%) to £358.9 billion | Increased £29.3 billion (6.1%) to £508.1 billion | Decreased £14.4 billion to £149.2 billion (deficit) |
Trade in services | Increased £6.9 billion (2.5%) to £288.0 billion | Increase £12.4 billion (7.3%) to £181.6 billion | Decrease £5.5 billion to £106.4 billion (surplus) |
Download this table Table 2: The trade deficit widened in the 12 months to June 2019, due largely to a widening of the trade in goods deficit
.xls .csv8. The trade in goods deficit widened with non-EU countries and narrowed with EU countries in the 12 months to June 2019
The £14.4 billion widening in the trade in goods deficit in the 12 months to June 2019 was due mainly to trade with non-EU countries (Figure 8). The trade in goods deficit widened £14.9 billion to £55.9 billion with non-EU countries and narrowed £0.5 billion to £93.4 billion with EU countries in the 12 months to June 2019.
The widening of the trade in goods deficit with non-EU countries in the 12 months to June 2019 was due mainly to imports, which increased £24.5 billion, while exports increased by a lesser £9.6 billion.
The largest contributors to the increase in imports from non-EU countries were unspecified goods (including non-monetary gold), fuels, and machinery and transport equipment, which increased £9.7 billion, £5.7 billion and £4.1 billion respectively.
Increased exports to non-EU countries were driven by increases in exports of fuels, unspecified goods and miscellaneous manufactures, which increased £2.9 billion, £2.1 billion and £2.1 billion respectively.
Figure 8: The widening of the trade in goods deficit was due mainly to increased imports from non-EU countries
Changes in UK goods exports, imports and trade balance with EU and non-EU countries, 12 months to June 2019 compared with 12 months to June 2018
Source: Office for National Statistics
Download this chart Figure 8: The widening of the trade in goods deficit was due mainly to increased imports from non-EU countries
Image .csv .xls10. Quality and methodology
Trade is measured through both exports and imports of goods and services. Data are supplied by over 30 sources including several administrative sources, HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) being the largest for trade in goods.
This monthly release contains tables showing the total value of trade in goods together with chained volume measures (CVMs) and implied deflators (IDEFs). Figures are analysed by broad commodity group (CP, CVMs and IDEFs) and according to geographical area (CP only). In addition, the UK trade statistical bulletin also includes early monthly estimates of the value of trade in services.
Further qualitative data and information can be found in the attached datasets. This includes data on:
Detailed methodological notes are published in the UK Balance of Payments, The Pink Book 2018.
The UK trade methodology web pages have been developed to provide detailed information about the methods used to produce UK trade statistics.
The UK trade Quality and Methodology Information report contains important information on:
the strengths and limitations of the data and how it compares with related data
uses and users of the data
how the output was created
the quality of the output including the accuracy of the data