The firs bar chart delineates the value of products that Australia imported from and exported to China over a six-year period, form 1998 to 2004, while second chart illustrates the types of goods imported from China in two different years: 2003 and 2004. The information is categorized by $ billion.
Overall, in that point onward the statistics for both import and export were in considerably low level, increasing constatnly year by year, while the value of those goods, imported from China, showed the highest figure in dataset over the course of entire period. Notably, the values of goods for each type – imported from China – were somewhat higher in 2004 compared to 2003, demonstrating the highest figure for telecommunication equipments in former year, meanwhile, toy and sport toos had the most margianl numbers in latter.
In 1998, the value of products that Australia imported from China was at 20 ($ billion) compared to 10 for exported goods. Both statistics saw a steady increase over the years by approximately 3 in each time span, reaching nearly 40 and 30, respectively.
With respect to the value of goods for each types, clothes demonstrated a parity in both, 2003 and 2004, at 4 ,whereas toy/sport equipments and telecommunication tools had a significant increase in value, form 2 to around 7 for former and from 5 to 8 for latter, in billion doolors. In contrast, the remaining types, computers and furniture, recorded relatively similar figures in both years, approximatly 5 in 2003 and 6 in 2004.
