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Int´l trade slides in Q2

Published : 19 Sep 2020, 01:27

Updated : 19 Sep 2020, 02:03

  DF Report
File Photo City of Helsinki by Pertti Nisonen.

The combined exports of goods and services in the second quarter of 2020 decreased by 18 per cent relative to the corresponding quarter of the previous year, according to the Statistics Finland.

International trade, or exports and imports, fell in both goods and services. Twenty-eight per cent less services were exported and 22 per cent less services were imported in the quarter year on year.

The relative decrease in international trade was the smallest in goods exports, which went down by 12 per cent. Imports of goods, in turn, fell by 20 per cent.

Exports of services and goods decreased in total by slightly more than EUR four billion year on year.

In the second quarter of 2019, goods amounting to EUR 15.8 billion and services amounting to EUR 7.9 billion were exported from Finland, but in the corresponding quarter of 2020, the value of goods exports was EUR 13.8 billion and that of service exports EUR 5.7 billion.

Thus, exports of goods diminished by 12 per cent and exports of services by 28 per cent over the year. In terms of service exports, especially exports of travel and transport services, developed weakly and the value of these two items fell by a total of EUR 1.3 billion. The ratio of the contraction of exports of travel and transport was thus as much as 59 per cent.

Travel to Finland and from Finland abroad marked a clear decline. Travel to Finland, which is recorded as travel exports, was 87 per cent lower in the second quarter of 2020 than one year earlier.

Travel from Finland abroad, or imports of travel, fell by 93 per cent, in turn. In the second quarter of 2019, income from exports of travel amounted to EUR 0.7 billion, while the value of imports of travel was EUR 1.3 billion.

In the second quarter of 2020, the value of both exports and imports of travel was slightly under EUR 0.1 billion. The fall in service exports during the first quarter of 2020 was also due to the weak development in travel and transport services, and the same trend continued even stronger in the second quarter.

International trade in transport services depends on the state of international trade in both travel and goods, which was not favourable.

The value of exports of transport services was EUR 1.1 billion in the second quarter of 2019, but in the last quarter it fell to EUR 0.5 billion. Transport exports thus declined by 59 per cent. Imports of transport services also decreased clearly from the previous year.

In other service items, exports contracted the most in charges for the use of intellectual property. Their total value in the second quarter of 2019 was EUR 1.1 billion and the fall from this level was around EUR 0.5 billion.

Although the value of the item decreased by as much as 43 per cent, its level has not changed as much compared to the other quarters of 2019. A significant decrease was also recorded in the exports of telecommunications, information and communication technologies (ICT), which decreased by EUR 0.2 billion. However, exports of ICT continued to be the largest item in service exports valued at EUR 2.5 billion. In addition, the value of exports of manufacturing services decreased by EUR 0.2 billion from its level of EUR 0.5 billion one year ago, which corresponds to a contraction of around one third.

The value of exports to Europe contracted by EUR 3.3 billion from the respective quarter of the year before. Because the value of total exports decreased by EUR 4.2 billion, the ratio of the drop in European exports to the drop in all exports was as high as 79 per cent. In the past quarter, goods and services for a total of EUR 12.9 billion were exported to Europe, while the corresponding figure last year was EUR 16.2 billion.

The fall in exports was great, especially concerning Sweden and Germany. Exports to Sweden fell by EUR 0.4 billion from the level of EUR 3.0 billion one year ago and exports to Germany by EUR 0.5 billion from the level of EUR 2.1 billion. Exports to other European countries also decreased. The values of exports to both the United Kingdom and Russia were EUR 1.1 billion in the second quarter of 2019 and for both countries the drop in exports was of the same size, that is, EUR 0.3 billion.

Exports of services to Germany decreased by 41 per cent, or relatively more than exports of goods, which went down by 16 per cent. Measured in relative terms, service exports to Europe in general went down by 32 per cent from the quarter one year ago, or more than goods exports, where the corresponding contraction was 15 per cent. Here, too, there were country-specific differences, because concerning Sweden and the United Kingdom, for example, the relative decrease in exports of services and goods was similar.

Europe's share of Finland's exports was 66 per cent and it did not significantly decrease from the year before. Exports to America went down by EUR 0.7 billion, which is due to the contraction of exports to the United States by one third from one year ago. Most of this is caused by a drop in goods exports. Goods were exported to the United States to the tune of EUR 1.7 billion in the second quarter of 2019, while in the past quarter the level had fallen to EUR one billion. In turn, exports to Africa decreased less and exports to Asia did not change much from their EUR 3.3 billion level.

Among the Asian countries, exports to China, however, grew by as much as 69 per cent from one year ago. On the other hand, the level of exports in the second quarter of 2020, that is, EUR 1.1 billion, was not higher than towards the end of 2019. Imports from China also grew by 12 per cent and were valued at EUR 1.6 billion in the last quarter. The growth in international trade with China was expressly caused by goods trade, because exports and imports of services decreased slightly. In general terms, service exports decreased clearly in Asia, for example, in Japan and South Korea.

As with exports, imports also decreased in Europe. The value of imports was EUR 19.0 billion one year ago, which fell to EUR 14.6 billion. Unlike the changes in exports, Russia had a bigger weight in the decrease in imports. Imports from Russia went down by as much as 52 per cent from the EUR 2.3 billion level in the previous year's corresponding quarter. In the last quarter, goods amounting to EUR 1.0 billion and services amounting to EUR 0.1 billion were imported from Russia, while one year ago the respective figures were EUR 2.0 billion and EUR 0.2 billion.