Official Statistics

Market access barrier statistics: July to September 2023

Updated 18 December 2023

1. Purpose

This release covers statistics on the market access barriers (MAB) reported and resolved by His Majesty’s Government officials in Quarter 2 (July to September) of the financial year ending (FYE) 2024. The Department for Business and Trade (DBT) records these barriers on a system internal to government called Digital Market Access Service (DMAS).

This quarterly publication includes:

  • headline statistics on the number of MAB reported
  • headline statistics on the number of MAB resolved
  • a breakdown of the above statistics by HMTC regions
  • total numbers of trading partners where barriers were reported and resolved
  • a comparison of the above statistics with Quarter 1 (April to June) of the FYE 2024

This will be the second quarterly Official Statistics release covering the data of Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024. This release also covers the revised data for Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024 and Quarter 4 of the FYE 2023. These statistics were designated as Official Statistics to improve the accuracy and consistency of the data. This is because these are DBT’s Outcome Delivery Plan metrics and are regularly published in the annual report and accounts (currently for Department for International Trade) as indicators on departmental performance.

Publication of market access barrier statistics provides signal to both consumers and business abroad that there is greater commitment from the government to resolve market access barriers and unlock trade opportunities abroad. They do not provide an indication of the value represented by barriers that have been resolved, or that are currently the subject of DBT’s market access activity. The aggregated valuation for a sample of resolved barriers is routinely included in the annual report and accounts.

DBT also releases information on trade barriers through the Check International Trade Barriers service (CITS). This provides information on a selection of barriers reported and barriers resolved by sector and location. The purpose is to raise awareness for UK businesses on a selection of the barriers DBT has worked to resolve or is working to resolve.

CITS publishes details for a selection of barriers. Certain barriers can be deemed unsuitable for publication for a variety of reasons including potential commercial or trade negotiation sensitivities. However, this statistical release provides headline figures on all the reported and resolved barriers for a reporting period.

2. Reported market access barriers headline statistics

2.1 Reported market access barriers in Quarter 2 (July to September) of the FYE 2024

78 reported barriers on DMAS

Figure 1 below shows that in Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024, 78 market access barriers were reported on DMAS, which is 14 more than Quarter 1 (April to June) of the FYE 2024 when 64 barriers were reported.

Figure 1: Number of reported market access barriers in Quarter 4 (Jan to Mar) of the FYE 2023, and in Quarter 1 (April to June) and Quarter 2 (July to Sep) of the FYE 2024

Number of reported barriers
FYE 2023 Quarter 4 79
FYE 2024 Quarter 1 64
FYE 2024 Quarter 2 78

Source: DBT internal Digital Market Access Service (DMAS).

2.2 Reported market access barriers by HMTC region in Quarter 2 (July to September) of the FYE 2024

22 highest reported on DMAS in Asia Pacific

The number of barriers reported within a geographic area can provide an indication of market access activity. However, this should not be understood as a complete indicator of the market access conditions within HMTC regions, or how they have changed. Instead, it represents the market access barriers that have been reported to DBT.

Table 1 below shows that in Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024, Asia Pacific had the highest number of barriers reported (22); whereas, in Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024 Europe had the highest number of barriers reported (22).

There is a variation in the number of reported barriers across regions between these time periods. This has less to do with changes in the market access conditions but more likely to reflect a mix of DBT’s operational activity and the firm behaviour/experience within the regions. A lot of this would be driven by whether firms experience a market access barrier in each reporting period and then whether they decide to engage on the issue with the DBT officials in the region. As a longer time series is developed through publication of quarterly statistics, this will allow a better understanding of the variation and volatility of the statistics over time and by regions.

Table 1: Number of reported market access barriers by HMTC regions in Quarter 4 (Jan to Mar) of the FYE 2023, and in Quarter 1 (Apr to June) and Quarter 2 (July to Sep) of the FYE 2024

HMTC Region FYE 2023 Quarter 4 FYE 2024 Quarter 1 FYE 2024 Quarter 2
Africa 9 7 8
Asia Pacific 9 11 22
China and Hong Kong 6 4 1
Eastern Europe and Central Asia 8 6 7
Europe 16 22 17
Latin America 16 7 8
Middle East, Afghanistan and Pakistan 1 7 3
North America 4 0 7
South Asia 10 0 5
Total 79 64 78

Source: DBT internal Digital Market Access Service (DMAS).

Table 2 below presents the percent share of HMTC regions in total barriers reported across all regions in Quarter 4 of the FYE 2023, and in Quarter 1 and Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024. The table shows that in Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024, Asia Pacific had the largest proportion of total barriers reported (28.2%); whereas, in Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024 the largest proportion of total barriers reported (34.4%) was in Europe.

Table 2: Proportion of reported market access barriers by HMTC regions in Quarter 4 (Jan to Mar) of the FYE 2023 and in Quarter 1 (Apr to June) and Quarter 2 (July to Sep) of the FYE 2024

HMTC Region % of total FYE 2023 Quarter 4 % of total FYE 2024 Quarter 1  % of total FYE 2024 Quarter 2
Africa 11.4% 10.9% 10.3%
Asia Pacific 11.4% 17.2% 28.2%
China and Hong Kong  7.6% 6.3% 1.3%
Eastern Europe and Central Asia 10.1% 9.4% 9.0%
Europe 20.3% 34.4% 21.8%
Latin America 20.3% 10.9% 10.3%
Middle East, Afghanistan and Pakistan 1.3% 10.9% 3.8%
North America 5.1% 0.0% 9.0%
South Asia 12.7% 0.0% 6.4%
Total 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%

Source: DBT internal Digital Market Access Service (DMAS).

2.3 Number of trading partners where market access barriers were reported in Quarter 2 (July to September) of the FYE 2024

Figure 2 below shows a count of trading partners where barriers were reported in Quarter 4 of the FYE 2023, and in Quarter 1 and Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024. In Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024, 40 trading partners reported 74 barriers on DMAS. This is 5 more than Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024 when 35 trading partners reported 59 barriers on DMAS.

Figure 2: Number of reported market access barriers by trading partners in Quarter 4 (Jan to Mar) of the FYE 2023, and in Quarter 1 (Apr to June) and Quarter 2 (July to Sep) of the FYE 2024

Number of Trading Partners/Barriers Reported FYE 2023 Quarter 4 FYE 2024 Quarter 1 FYE 2024 Quarter 2
Number of trading partners reporting a barrier 41 35  40
Number of barriers reported from trading partners  78  59  74 

Source: DBT internal Digital Market Access Service (DMAS).

Note: the above figure does not include barriers reported by trading blocs.

3. Resolved market access barriers headline statistics

3.1 Resolved market access barriers in Quarter 2 (July to September) of the FYE 2024, as recorded on DMAS

27 resolved in full

4 resolved in part

When the underlying issues related to a market access barrier have been addressed and are no longer acting as an impediment to trade, DBT staff update the DMAS entry with status as “resolved”. Barriers on DMAS can be marked as “resolved in full” when the issue has been fully addressed or “resolved in part” when only a part of the issues related to a barrier is resolved.

The statistics on resolved barriers in Figure 3 below show that in Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024.

31 market access barriers were marked as either fully resolved or resolved in part - this is 6 fewer barriers than Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024, of which:

  • 27 barriers were resolved in full  - this is 1 fewer barrier compared with Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024

  • 4 barriers were resolved in part - this is 5 fewer barriers compared with Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024

Note: for some barriers, between any 2 quarters, the DMAS status could change from ‘resolved in part’ to ‘resolved in full’ or vice versa.

Figure 3: Number of resolved market access barriers, in part and in full, in Quarter 4 (Jan to Mar) of the FYE 2023, and in Quarter 1 (Apr to June) and Quarter 2 (July to Sep) of the FYE 2024

Reporting period FYE 2023 Quarter 4 FYE 2024 Quarter 1 FYE 2024 Quarter 2
Resolved in part 13 9 4
Resolved in full 30 28 27
Total  43 37 31

Source: DBT internal Digital Market Access Service (DMAS).

Note: statistics on resolved barriers will be affected by factors such as:

  • scope of resolution (whether it is fully or partially resolved)

  • profile of barriers resolved (the time and action required to resolve any individual barrier can vary considerably)

  • operational factors and reporting behaviour (for instance, data lags between a barrier being resolved and its DMAS status being updated to reflect this)

3.2 Resolved market access barriers by HMTC region in Quarter 2 (July to Sep) of the FYE 2024, as recorded on DMAS

8 highest number resolved in Africa

1 lowest number resolved in Middle East, Afghanistan and Pakistan, and South Asia

The number of barriers resolved within a geographic area can provide an indication of market access activity. It is not however, the sole means to determine the effectiveness or impact of market access barrier resolution activity. Headline figures on resolved barriers do not give any indication of the level of activity required to achieve a resolution, nor the scale of opportunities posed by the barriers resolved.

Table 3 below shows that in Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024, Africa (8) had the highest number of barriers resolved; whereas, in Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024, Latin America (9) had the highest number of barriers resolved across HMTC regions.

Table 3: Number of resolved market access barriers, in part and in full, by HMTC regions in Quarter 1 (Apr to June) and Quarter 2 (July to Sep) of the FYE 2024

HMTC region Resolved in part FYE 2024 Quarter 1 Resolved in full FYE 2024 Quarter 1 Total for FYE 2024 Quarter 1  Resolved in part FYE 2024 Quarter 2  Resolved in full FYE 2024 Quarter 2  Total for FYE 2024 Quarter 2 
Africa 2 6  8 1 7 8
Asia Pacific 1 1 2 2 3 5
China and Hong Kong 0 1 1 0 0 0
Eastern Europe and Central Asia 1 1 3 4
Europe 3 3 0 7 7
Latin America 1 9 0 5 5
Middle East, Afghanistan and Pakistan 1 0 1 1
North America 0 1 1 0 0 0
South Asia 0 1 1 0 1 1
Total 9 28 37 4 27 31

Source: DBT internal Digital Market Access Service (DMAS).

Table 4 below shows that in Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024, Africa (25.8%) had the largest proportion of barriers resolved; whereas, in Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024, Latin America (24.3%) had the largest proportion of barriers resolved across HMTC regions.

Table 4: Resolved market access barriers (including in part and in full) by HMTC regions as a percentage share of total in Quarter 4 (Jan to Mar) of the FYE 2023, and in Quarter 1 (Apr to Jun) and Quarter 2 (July to Sep) of the FYE 2024

HMTC region % of total resolved FYE 2023 Quarter 4 % of total resolved FYE 2024 Quarter 1 % of total resolved FYE 2024 Quarter 2
Africa  18.6% 21.6% 25.8%
Asia Pacific 9.3% 5.4%  16.1%
China and Hong Kong 2.3% 2.7% 0.0%
Eastern Europe and Central Asia 9.3% 8.1% 12.9%
Europe 27.9% 16.2% 22.6%
Latin America 14.0%  24.3% 16.1%
Middle East, Afghanistan and Pakistan 16.3% 16.2% 3.2%
North America  0.0% 2.7% 0.0%
South Asia 2.3% 2.7% 3.2%
Total  100.0% 100.0%  100.0%

Source: DBT internal Digital Market Access Service (DMAS).

3.3 Number of trading partners where market access barriers were resolved (in part and in full) in Quarter 2 (July to September) of the FYE 2024, as recorded on DMAS

The number of trading partners where barriers were resolved can provide some illustration on the breadth of market access activity being undertaken, although this provides no indication of the depth of the market access activity in the domain of the trading partner.

Figure 4 below shows a count of trading partners where a barrier was marked as resolved in Quarter 4 of the FYE 2023, and in Quarter 1 and Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024. In Quarter 2 of the FYE 2024, 22 trading partners resolved 31 barriers on DMAS. This is 2 fewer than Quarter 1 of the FYE 2024 when 24 trading partners resolved 36 barriers on DMAS.

Figure 4: Number of trading partners where barriers were resolved in part and in full, in Quarter 4 (Jan to Mar) of the FYE 2023, and in Quarter 1 (Apr to June) and Quarter 2 (July to Sep) of the FYE 2024

Number of trading partners FYE 2023 Quarter 4  FYE 2024 Quarter 1   FYE 2024 Quarter 2
Number of trading partners where barrier was resolved in part 12 8 3
Number of trading partners where barrier was resolved in full 22 19 21
Total number of trading partners where barrier was resolved  29 24 22

Source: DBT internal Digital Market Access Service (DMAS).

Note:

  • a trading partner could be part of both resolved in full and resolved in part count, resulting in total not matching

  • the above figure does not include barriers reported by trading blocs