Trade
in Medical Goods Stabilises after Peaking during Pandemic
The COVID-19 pandemic had an
overall negative impact on global trade in goods, with one notable exception: trade
in medical products. Accounting for just 6.4 per cent of total world trade in 2018,
medical goods rose to an 8.3 per cent share in 2020.
This increase can be attributed
to a decline in international trade overall, coupled with a surge in demand for
medical goods at the peak of the pandemic. Between 2019 and 2020, trade in medical
goods grew by 13 per cent – primarily driven by an increased demand for personal
protective equipment – while global trade contracted by 6.6 per cent.
This positive trend continued
into 2021, with further growth of 14.1 per cent for medical goods, largely due to
a significant increase in pharmaceutical trade.
More recently, the share of medical
goods in total merchandise trade has reverted to pre-pandemic levels, declining
to 6.9 per cent in 2022.
Personal protective equipment
and pharmaceutical products
The surge in medical goods trade
was largely due to increased trade in personal protective equipment (PPE) and pharmaceutical
products during the pandemic
In 2020, trade in PPE recorded
a remarkable increase of 53 per cent, generally due to the increased demand for
face masks and other protective equipment essential to curb the transmission of
the coronavirus.
In 2021 and 2022, trade in PPE
slightly declined, by 5.7 per cent and 5.2 per cent respectively, but the values
remained considerably higher than pre-pandemic levels.
In 2022, the value of PPE remained
above US$ 200 billion, significantly higher than the US$ 146 billion recorded in
2019.
Trade in pharmaceutical products
followed a slower upward trajectory, due to the long period between developing such
products and distributing them. The share of global pharmaceutical trade saw a significant
increase in 2021, growing by as much as 19.7 per cent. This increase can be attributed
to trade in COVID-19 vaccines, which got under way in 2021.
Medical goods are divided into
five product categories:
Product
category |
Coverage |
A
- Pharmaceutical products |
Products
as defined by the WTO Pharma Agreement (HS chapter 30, and headings 2936,
2937, 2939, 2941) |
B
- Medical equipment |
Medical
equipment and machines (majority of products in HS chapter 90) including
magnetic resonance imaging apparatus, X-ray tubes, or operating tables |
C
- Orthopedic equipment |
Orthopedic
devices such as wheelchairs, spectacles, hearing aids, or artificial teeth |
D
- Personal protective equipment |
Equipment
and single-use items such as gloves and face masks (excluding protective
garments as HS classifications largely overlap with products for nonmedical
use) |
E
- Other medical supplies |
Hospital
and laboratory inputs and consumables, such as syringes |
Exporters of medical goods
In 2022, the top 10 exporters
of medical goods accounted for nearly three-quarters of the global total.
Germany was the top exporter
of medical goods, with total exports of US$ 202.6 billion, representing 12.9 per
cent of the world’s exports.
The United States, with exports
of US$ 189.6 billion (12 per cent of world exports of medical goods), and China,
with exports of US$ 137.3 billion (8.7 per cent of world exports), ranked second
and third.
While Germany was the top exporter
of medical goods, the United States was the top exporter of medical equipment, orthopaedic
equipment and other medical supplies. China was the top exporter of personal protective
equipment.
Between 2019 and 2022, China
moved from fifth to third place, primarily because of a significant increase in
exports of personal protective equipment.
During the same period, Belgium
rose from seventh to fourth place, becoming the second-largest exporter of pharmaceutical
products.
The top exporters also figure
among the top importers.
Importers
of medical goods
Importers of medical goods are
not as concentrated as exporters, with the top 10 importers accounting for roughly
two-thirds of the world’s medical goods rather than three-quarters.
In 2022, the United States was
the top importer, with US$ 306 billion worth of medical goods (see Figure 4). This
constitutes a significant share of the market, representing 19.2 per cent of the
world total.
Germany ranked second, with imports
of medical goods worth US$ 134.2 billion, less than half of the US import value.
Belgium was the third top importer
in 2022, due to its imports of pharmaceutical products, followed by China.
Belgium and Switzerland slightly
improved their ranking position between 2019 and 2022, mainly due to their increased
imports of pharmaceutical goods. The ranking of the other main importers remained
relatively stable.
The information originally published
by the WTO on the evolution of trade in medical products is available in a series
of reports issued by the WTO entitled “Trade in medical goods in the context of
tackling COVID-19”. These reports present the effects of the pandemic on international
trade flows. The most recent one was released in July 2022.