Trade in a Bottle: Identifying Import Bottlenecks in International Trade

Country Matrix

For 2007, the matrix below shows Australia's number of import bottlenecks for different combinations of minimum import share (%) and minimum import value (USD). Red parentheses show bottlenecks from Danger Zone countries, and lime square brackets show bottlenecks involving Critical Goods.

Australia

Year: 2007(2 in Danger Zone)[2 Critical Goods]
Value \ Share>= 30%>= 40%>= 50%>= 60%>= 70%>= 80%>= 90%
>= 10 mln USD409(2)[2]285(1)[2]183(1)[2]125[2]905216
>= 50 mln USD178[2]124[2]83[2]53[2]37265
>= 100 mln USD108[2]75[2]50[2]31[2]22162
>= 200 mln USD49[2]36[2]22[2]16[2]1161
>= 500 mln USD15[2]10[2]5[2]3[2]000

Danger Zone Bottlenecks (2 records, >= 30% share, >= 10 mln USD)

#Partner HS Code HS DescriptionYearShare (%) Value (USD)
1Bahrain7614Aluminium; stranded wire, cables, plaited bands and the like, (not electrically insulated)200759.54%25,730,491
2Russian Federation7110Platinum; unwrought or in semi-manufactured forms, or in powder form200732.62%47,987,616

Partner frequency summary:

Bahrain: 1 occurrence

Russian Federation: 1 occurrence

Legend:

(n)

The number in red parentheses indicates bottlenecks from countries flagged in the Danger Zone.

[n]

The number in lime square brackets indicates bottlenecks involving HS codes flagged in Critical Goods.