The bar chart illustrates different types of products involved in global trade, including equipment, telecommunications, clothing, manufacturing, and metals, between 2009 and 2010. Overall, the value of all products selling abroad experienced varying degrees of increase, with exception of clothing and manufacturing, whose number showed the opposite trend. The figure for metals topped the list, closely followed by telecommunity. It is also clear that the overall proportion of changes, between 2009 and 2010, showed a positive percentage of exported products that witnessed an increase.
Focusing on more prominent industry, equipment topped the chart at nearly 10.3 billion in 2009, a figure that, after an increase reached 11.6 billion, which meant it grew almost for 13%. Despite the significance in value, the telecommunity and metals, even though they had comparatively low trade value in both periods, emerged as dominants in rate of change, 61% and 120% respectively. This represents a roughly twofold increase, showing a growing potential of telecommunity and metals.
Regarding the opposite trend, manufacturing and clothing witnessed a drop in value, from 5.5 to 4 and from 6 to 5 respectively. Consequently its rate of change as well as experienced a drop in percentage, making up a mere 27% and 17% in order.
