Overview Table

Table 
40: Non-Oil Exports According to Destination*

Data for April - June 2022

(Thousand Dinars)

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COUNTRIES 2018 2019 2020 2021 2020 Q4 2021 Q1 2021 Q2 2021 Q3 2021 Q4
ARAB COUNTRIES 885,711 933,162 711,470 845,642 209,983 197,525 206,716 216,679 224,722
Saudi Arabia 165,669 199,914 205,669 219,618 59,070 56,832 55,074 50,296 57,416
United Arab Emirates 240,435 173,005 167,856 242,735 46,839 59,850 56,412 62,530 63,943
Iraq 188,293 291,526 118,520 152,301 39,107 24,561 44,990 45,222 37,528
Qatar 129,424 109,173 87,898 84,339 25,726 21,365 17,815 19,635 25,524
Jordan 29,262 32,511 32,015 39,108 9,820 8,136 8,407 12,385 10,180
Bahrain 22,907 20,296 16,656 17,309 4,872 4,011 3,990 3,752 5,556
Egypt 15,859 13,863 8,897 23,523 3,454 3,337 5,372 7,131 7,683
Oman 60,636 62,010 53,972 44,018 13,421 11,913 8,457 12,322 11,326
Lebanon 9,823 13,273 4,667 6,040 1,000 1,078 1,185 1,071 2,706
Algeria 3,547 4,271 1,647 1,098 349 129 425 115 429
Tunisia 4,109 1,952 971 831 373 66 310 254 201
Sudan 5,204 3,812 4,394 6,209 2,060 2,252 2,226 837 894
Morocco 5,568 1,610 924 259 182 12 91 124 32
Other 4,975 5,946 7,384 8,254 3,710 3,983 1,962 1,005 1,304
AFRICAN NON-ARAB COUNTRIES 33,256 33,186 33,938 17,760 2,913 3,550 5,139 4,583 4,488
South Africa 17,239 13,208 3,415 1,015 419 146 282 69 518
Ethiopia 1,275 740 327 586 103 146 185 113 142
Tanzania 357 403 121 377 81 31 43 103 200
Kenya 815 964 1,032 963 253 157 404 108 294
Other 13,570 17,871 29,043 14,819 2,057 3,070 4,225 4,190 3,334
AMERICAN COUNTRIES 47,468 22,399 20,014 15,406 4,169 2,163 6,179 2,224 4,840
United States of America 26,837 15,631 17,995 12,089 3,503 1,627 5,655 1,220 3,587
Brazil 16,815 158 342 391 81 145 42 59 145
Argentina 2,972 168 241 45 232 5 - 26 14
Venezuela 1 62 6 60 6 11 - 31 18
Canada 311 5,494 526 913 184 186 56 110 561
Other 532 886 904 1,908 163 189 426 778 515
ASIAN NON-ARAB COUNTRIES 922,114 714,154 496,680 646,785 129,688 118,998 186,058 153,739 187,990
China People's Republic 287,747 276,530 182,152 215,023 47,584 37,230 70,798 32,678 74,317
India 343,886 244,608 158,122 211,705 37,466 47,494 58,450 49,280 56,481
Turkey 47,210 25,939 15,353 19,956 1,454 2,747 4,950 3,689 8,570
Pakistan 87,361 57,105 51,851 94,167 16,773 13,235 24,765 33,739 22,428
Indonesia 10,141 5,980 6,498 1,699 727 431 756 157 355
Malaysia 10,462 7,465 5,990 17,099 2,895 4,187 7,697 2,975 2,240
Iran 19,754 16,945 4,946 5,493 516 565 753 2,574 1,601
Singapore 12,098 9,575 8,215 25,516 2,804 1,847 5,046 14,795 3,828
Taiwan 17,869 7,006 4,189 3,993 1,970 1,729 1,214 68 982
South Korea 6,540 8,698 7,719 6,813 4,095 3,983 1,786 447 597
Japan 3,765 3,010 1,425 340 358 76 113 46 105
Philippines 3,358 2,908 7,508 4,072 799 715 824 898 1,635
Other 71,923 48,385 42,712 40,909 12,247 4,759 8,906 12,393 14,851
EUROPEAN COUNTRIES 78,844 59,408 52,291 72,871 11,878 13,888 18,787 21,524 18,672
Belgium-Luxembourg 14,394 7,287 4,772 10,965 1,963 1,690 3,637 2,175 3,463
Italy 7,865 4,802 7,485 6,193 823 927 1,390 1,329 2,547
France 8,416 3,075 2,858 2,349 758 294 504 917 634
United Kingdom 7,873 5,842 5,056 7,233 1,392 1,413 1,427 2,309 2,084
Switzerland 6,665 15,024 4,481 3,932 1,897 1,514 918 1,015 485
Netherlands 10,660 4,748 6,843 10,515 1,332 1,631 2,875 4,151 1,858
Germany 4,436 4,575 2,478 2,191 514 402 816 616 357
Spain 5,279 3,544 1,664 2,945 625 1,875 638 162 270
Russian Federation 1,857 1,005 854 470 99 172 19 159 120
Portugal 5,325 3,338 5,957 21,111 1,549 3,509 4,485 7,413 5,704
Norway 276 827 123 382 13 103 170 42 67
Greece 993 742 322 190 70 1 45 42 102
Other 4,805 4,599 9,398 4,395 843 357 1,863 1,194 981
OCEANIC COUNTRIES, of which 13,919 1,195 476 1,085 186 180 571 84 250
Australia 13,571 1,137 441 879 185 157 538 77 107
New Zealand 318 58 35 206 1 23 33 7 143
Not Specified 24 1 21 78 11 8 - - 70
Total 1,981,336 1,763,505 1,314,890 1,599,627 358,828 336,312 423,450 398,833 441,032
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Source : Central Statistical Bureau.
(*)
Quarterly data may vary from annual data according to the bulletins issued by the Central Statistical Bureau.

All data is the property of Central Bank of Kuwait.

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Quarterly Statistical Bulletin

The "Quarterly Statistical Bulletin" provides up-to-date statistics and data and highlights a number of economic, financial, monetary and banking developments in the State of Kuwait's economy and their impact on the local monetary and banking indicators during that quarter.

Moreover, the "Quarterly Statistical Bulletin" presents recent data on the most notable developments in the Balance of Payments and General Budget of the State of Kuwait, and Kuwait Stock Exchange.

Definitions:

  1. Currency in Circulation:
    Currency outside the vaults of the Central Bank of Kuwait, which represents the amount of currency issued by the CBK and held by residents and non- residents.
  2. Currency in Circulation Outside the Local Banks:
    Currency in circulation - the Currency in the vault of the local banks.
  3. Monetary Base or Money Supply in its narrow definition (M0):
    Signifies currency in Circulation, demand and time deposits of local banks and other resident financial institutions with the CBK, Monetary Base means money supply in its narrowest definition (M0).
  4. Money (M1):
    Currency in circulation outside the local banks + sigh deposits with local banks (private deposits in KD). Money means money supply in its narrow definition (M1).
  5. Quasi-money:
    Balances of Savings deposits (in KD) + time deposits (in KD) + foreign currency deposits + CDs (in KD). The private sector maintains quasi-money components with local banks.
  6. Certificates of Deposit:
    Negotiable financial papers denominated in Kuwaiti dinars. The term quasi-money also includes that portion of CDs issued by Kuwaiti local banks and held by other parties (i.e. excluding the portion held by these banks themselves).
  7. Money Supply in its Broad Definition (M2):
    Money (M1) + quasi-money.
  8. Money Supply in its broader definition (M3):
    Includes money supply in its broad definition (M2), plus private sector deposits with deposit-accepting investment companies.
  9. Claims on the Private Sector:
    Credit facilities extended by local banks to the private sector + domestic investments by local banks + CDs issued by other non-bank private sector units and held by local banks.
  10. Credit Facilities:
    Discounts and advances provided by local banks to residents, either in the form of overdrafts, or loans for specific purposes and fixed terms, whether given in both local or foreign currencies to persons, financial or non-financial companies and institutions (other than banks).
  11. Private Sector:
    It means individuals, institutions and companies belonging to private, joint or public sectors, including public institutions with independent budgets (excluding Kuwait Credit Bank).
  12. Government:
    Ministries, governmental departments, and public institutions with attached budgets and Kuwait Credit Bank.
  13. Local Banks:
    Include all Kuwaiti banks, foreign banks’ branches licensed to operate in the State of Kuwait.
  14. Other Deposit Liabilities with Local Banks:
    Such as matured time deposits not covered by instructions for renewal from customer, deposits belonging to customers at branches and resulting from the payment of salaries by the government and institutions through the main office, funds due to commission agents concerning letters of credit, salaries or funds transferred to certain customers who have no sight deposit accounts, or who have accounts but no mention is made of the number, and suspense accounts (for example, the address of the customers is unknown), as well as other liabilities.
  15. Exchange Companies:
    Exchange Companies encompass those companies subject to CBK’s supervision and licensed to exercise banking activities (such as purchasing and selling currencies, travelers cheques and drafts, trading in precious metals, and collecting cheques and drafts drawn on foreign entities). These companies do not include individually-owned exchange institutions which are not subject to CBK’s supervision.
  16. Investment/Finance Companies:
    Include conventional and Islamic investment/finance companies registered with the CBK. In accordance with Law No. 7/2010 concerning the establishment of the Capital Markets Authority (CMA) and the Regulation of the Activity of Securities, and Ministerial Decision No. 38/2011 regarding the organization of CBK’s supervision on finance companies, the supervision on investment companies has transferred from the CBK to CMA as of 13 September 2011. Therefore, CBK’s role toward these companies is now confined to the supervision of their practiced financial activity.
  17. Credit Cards, Issued by Local Banks:
    Credit Cards are plastic cards which provide customers with credit up to certain limits, and may allow him payment by installment of the amount debited using the card.
  18. Debit Cards, Issued by Local Banks :
    Debit Cards are plastic cards which directly debit the customer’s account. Their limits are the available balance in the customer’s account, and they are linked to the customer’s account at the issuing bank.
  19. Valid Cards:
    Represent credit/debit cards valid as at the end of the period, and is calculated as the total number of these cards valid at the start of the period, PLUS their total number issued for the first time during the period, MINUS the total number of these cards which were cancelled and not renewed during that period.
  20. Point-of-Sale Machines:
    Machines which local banks (conventional, Islamic, and foreign bank branches) provide to the traders among their customers, for processing the credit/debit card payment transactions of these traders’ customers.
  21. ATMs:
    Automatic Teller Machines (ATMs) are operated or loaded by local banks (conventional, Islamic, and foreign banks’ branches), whether owned by these banks or by the K-Net Company, and are used to process cash withdrawal operations carried out through plastic cards, as well as other banking transactions.

Notes

  1. Tables in this bulletin encompass the available data at local banks and investment companies registered with CBK.
  2. As of December 2004 tables in this publication encompass data updated according to the Islamic Banking Supervision (IBS) forms, in addition to data on the BNP Paribas Bank (Kuwait Branch) as of March 2005, the HSBC Middle East Bank (Kuwait Branch) as of September 2005, the National Bank of Abu Dhabi (Kuwait Branch) as of November 2005, the Citibank (Kuwait Branch) as of April 2006, the Qatar National Bank (Kuwait Branch) as of December 2007, the Doha Bank (Kuwait Branch) as of June 2008, the Mashreq Bank (Kuwait Branch) as of September 2009, and the BankMuscat (Kuwait Branch) as of March 2010. These tables also include aggregate financial data on conventional investment companies and investment companies operating according to the provisions of Islamic Sharia, as of December 2001.
  3. Deposits of the Savings and Credit Bank were reclassified under Government deposits.

Symbols and Notes

... Not Available * Provisional, or estimated figures
. Not Applicable x Revised figures
- Magnitude zero or insignificant n New tables
1 Significant breaks in the homogeneity of a series are indicated by a horizontal or vertical line across the series. 2 The slight discrepancies in totals or percentages are due to rounding.

Notes

  • Tables in this bulletin encompass the available data about conventional and Islamic local banks, investment companies and finance companies registered with the CBK, and exchange companies. For further information, please refer to the CBK’s website: www.cbk.gov.kw
  • Deposits of Kuwait Credit Bank (formerly Savings and Credit Bank) were reclassified under Government deposits.