Imports of Goods and Services (BOP)
Imports of Goods and Services (Balance of Payments) measure the total value of goods and services acquired by residents from non-residents, recorded when ownership is transferred. Goods are valued on a CIF (cost, insurance and freight) or FOB (free-on-board) basis depending on national practice and must physically enter the country, while services cover items such as foreign travel, transport, royalties and financial services. As part of the current account, this indicator captures total external purchases and is a core input for trade-balance and external-sector analysis across Latin America and the Caribbean. The series is published in the Latin Macro Watch dataset maintained by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB).
Coverage
Data are available for 24 countries across Latin America and the Caribbean at annual, monthly, and quarterly frequency, spanning 1991 to 2026. Values are provided in millions of USD and as a share of GDP, on a year-to-date (YTD), fiscal-year (Q4–Q3 aggregation), and seasonally adjusted basis. Standard transformations include moving averages (MA3, MA6, MA12) and month-over-month (MoM %), quarter-over-quarter (QoQ %), and year-over-year (YoY %) growth rates.
Sources
Figures are compiled from official national authorities, including the Banco Central do Brasil, Banco de Mexico (Banxico), Banco de la República de Colombia, Banco Central de Chile, Bank of Guyana, and INDEC - Argentina, among other central banks and statistical offices across the region.
Metadata & use
| Format | CSV |
|---|---|
| Language | en |
| Country |
Argentina
Bahamas
Trinidad & Tobago
Belize
Costa Rica
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Bolivia
Brazil
Chile
Colombia
El Salvador
Jamaica
Mexico
Nicaragua
Guatemala
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
Panama
Uruguay
Venezuela
Barbados
Paraguay
Peru
Suriname
|
| Data notes |
What does Imports of Goods and Services (BOP) measure?It measures the total value of goods and services acquired by residents from non-residents, recorded when ownership is transferred. Goods must physically enter the country, while services include travel, transport, royalties and financial services. How many countries and which periods are covered?The indicator covers 24 countries across Latin America and the Caribbean from 1991 to 2026, at annual, monthly, and quarterly frequency. What units and transformations are available?Values are available in millions of USD and as a share of GDP, on YTD, fiscal-year (Q4–Q3 aggregation), and seasonally adjusted bases. Transformations include MA3, MA6, MA12 moving averages and MoM %, QoQ %, and YoY % growth rates. Where does the data come from?Figures are compiled from official national authorities, including the Banco Central do Brasil, Banco de Mexico (Banxico), Banco de la República de Colombia, Banco Central de Chile, Bank of Guyana, and INDEC - Argentina, among other central banks and statistical offices. What are typical uses of this indicator?It is widely used to compute the trade balance and current account, monitor external demand and import dependence, and support macroeconomic and external-sector analysis across the region. How do I cite this indicator?Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), Latin Macro Watch — "Imports of Goods and Services (BOP)". data.iadb.org/dataset/latin-macro-watch-dataset. |