HANDBOOK OF ECONOMIC STATISTICS 1975

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CIA-RDP07-00617R000200230001-5
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December 22, 2016
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January 24, 2011
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1
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Publication Date: 
August 1, 1975
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REPORT
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Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Research .Aid ~- ._ Handbook of Econoynic Statistics 1975 A (ER) 75-65 August 1975 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 This publication is prepared for the use of U.S. Government officials. The format, coverage, and contents of the publi- cation are designed to meet the specific requirements of governmental users. All inquiries concerning this document from non-U.S. Government users are to be addressed to: Document Expediting (DOCEX) Project Exchange and Gift Division Library of Congress Washington, D.C. 20540 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Handbook of Economic Statistics 1975 Comments and queries regarding this Handbook are welcome. They may be directed to the Chief, Economic Accounts Section, Production Staff, Office of Economic Research, Central Intelligence Agency, Washington, D.C. 20505. Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 FOREWORD 1. Purpose and Scope The Handbook o f Economic Statistics, 1975, pro- vides statistics for selected non-Communist coun- tries and all the Communist countries. In general, the data in the Handbook are for 1965-74. Summary tables are presented for the United States, West Germany, Japan, the European Community, the USSR, Eastern Europe, and the People's Republic of China. Data for the Communist and non-Communist countries have been adjusted, when necessary, to achieve comparability and there- fore may differ from data presented in the original sources. Footnotes have been used liberally to give definitions, exceptions, and methodology. Footnotes to the commodity tables give more detailed defini- tions of the data than those appearing for the com- modities on the summary tables. 2. Rounding of the Totals The totals have been rounded, with some ex- ceptions, to three significant digits. In general, zeros appearing after the last nonzero number following the decimal point ,are not significant but are used merely for consistency in presenta- tion, and, because of rounding, components may not add to the totals shown. Totals are not pre- sented if missing data are believed to represent a _ significant part of the total. 3. Symbols - The abbreviation N.A. (not available) is used when information about the existence of the data or the magnitude of the data is not available, and the abbreviation Negl. (negligible) is used when the magnitude of the data is less than half of the final unit employed for each table. The metric system is used throughout. 4. Sources The data given for the most recent years are frequently preliminary and subject to revision. The data for the Communist countries are estimates of this Office, official data from the country cited, or estimates made by other organizations. The data for the non-Communist countries are from publica- tions of the United Nations and the Organiza- tion for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD ), publications of US government agencies, or unclassified publications of other international or- ganizations or individual countries, or are estimates of this Office. Unless otherwise indicated, the term Communist Countries includes the USSR, the countries of Eastern Europe, China, North Korea, North Viet- nam, Albania, Cuba, and Yugoslavia; the term Eastern Europe includes Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, East Germany, Hungary, Poland, and Romania. The term European Community includes Belgium, Den- mark, France, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, and West Ger- many. The term developed countries includes the European Community, Austria, Finland, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Aus- tralia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, South Africa, and the United States. The term Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development includes Greece; Portugal, Spain, Turkey, and all the de- veloped countries, except Liechtenstein and South Africa. The term less developed countries includes the following non-Communist countries: (1) all countries of Africa except the Republic of South Africa, (2) all countries of East Asia except Japan, (3) Malta, Portugal, and Spain in Europe, (4) all countries in Latin America, and (5) all countries in the Middle East and South Asia. Totals for the country groupings may or may not include gall of the countries listed above, de- pending on the commodity or services listed. Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Where You Will Find Statistics On . . /~ FIGURE ~; GRAPHIC SUMMARY 1 World Gross National Product, 1974 ................ 1 2 Developed Countries: Deviation of Real Gross National Product from the Long?Term Trend...... 2 3 Gross Investment as a Share of Gross National Product ........................................... 3 4 Foreign Exchange Value of the US Dollar............ 3 5 Developed Countries: Changes in Real Gross National Product . ........................ 4 ~ ? 6 Real Gross National Product Trends ................. 5 ~ 7 World Oil, 1974 ......... .. .. ......................... 6 8 Agricultural Production .............................. 7 9 Industrial Production ................................ 7 ~ 10 Developed Countries: Industrial Capacity and Output ' Trends .................. .. ......................... 8 ~ 11 Commodity Price Trends ... .. .. ..................... 9 12 Developed Countries: Wholesale and Consumer Price Trends .......... ............................. 10 13 International Reserves, 1974 ........................ 11 ~ 14 World Exports, 1974 ................ ................. 11 15 OECD Countries: Shifts in Trade Balances.... .. .. ... 12 16 Developed Countries: Oil and Non?Oil Trade Balance. 13 17 Minerals: Imports as a Share of Consumption, 1973.. 14 ~ ECONOMIC PROFILE i 1 Developed Countries and Communist Countries..... 15 2 Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries...... 16-17 3 Less Developed Countries ...... .. ................... 18-19 4 United States ........... ............................. 20 j 5 Japan ....................... .. .. .. .. ................. 21 6 West Germany ....................................... 22 7 European Community . ... ........................... 23 /~ 8 USSR ................. ............................... 24 ~ 9 Eastern Europe ......... .. ........................... 25 ' 10 China ................... .. .. .............?............ 26 11 US and USSR: Indicators of Living Standards........ 27 AGGREGATIVE TRENDS ! 12-14 Gross National Product . .. ........................... 29-31 I 15 Growth of Real Gross National Product .............. 32 16 Growth of Real Gross National Product Per Capita... 33 I 17 Current Account Balance........... 34 18 Basic Balance ............ .. .. .. ..................... 34 ' 19 International Reserves ... .. .. .. .. ................... 35 20-21 Industrial Production ..... .. .. .. ..................... 35-36 22 Agricultural Production ......... .. ................... 3i 23 Defense Expenditures .... .. ......................... 38 ' 24 Metal Prices ......... .. .. ........................... 39 25 Agricultural Prices ........ .. .. .. ..................... 39 ' 26 Consumer Price Index ............................... 40 27 Wholesale Price Index .... .. ......................... 40 - 28 Population .............. .. .. .. .. .. .. ................. 41 29-32 Labor Force .......................................... 42-43 33 Exchange Rates ...... .. ............................. 44 ' SOVIET ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE 34 Gross National Product .............................. 45 35 Gross Fixed Capital Investment ...................... 45 I 36 Stock of Fixed Capital .... ........................... 46 37 Aggregate Factor Productivity ....................... 46 I 38 Industrial Factor Productivity ... ..................... 47 ~ , 39 Growth of Industrial Production ..................... 47 ' 40 Hard Currency Trade Balance ....................... 48 ? 41 Drawings and Scheduled Repayments on Western I Credits ............... .............................. 48 ~ ~~ 42 Production and Reserves of Gold .................... 48 ' ~ 43 State Budget ........................................ 49 ' 44 Economic Plans ...................................... 50 v _ Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 i TABLE PAGE I ; FOREIGN TRADE 45-47 Non?Communist Countries' Trade ................... 51-53 ' 48 Direction of OECD Trade ...... .. ..................... 54 49-51 Soviet Trade ......................................... 54-55 ~~ 52-54 Chinese Trade ....................................... 56-57 ' 55-57 East European Trade ..... ........................... 57-59 58 Oil Import Bill ...................... .. ............... 60 59 Arms Exports to LDCs ............................... 60 AID 60-61 Gross Official Bilateral Capital Flows ................ 61-62 I To The Less Developed Countries 62 US Economic Loans and Grants ..................... 63 < 63 US Military Deliveries . ............................... 64 64 Communist Economic Extensions and Drawings..... 65 , ; 65 Communist Military Extensions and Drawings....... 65 ; 66 Soviet Economic Extensions ......................... 66 67 Chinese Economic Extensions . ... .. ................. 67 68 East European Economic Extensions ................ 67 69 Military Personnel Trained in Communist Countries.. 68 , 70 Economic and Military Technicians .................. 69 I .71 Trainees Departing for' Training in Communist Countries .......................................... 70 To The Communist Countries 72 Soviet Economic Extensions ......................... 70 ENERGY 73 Primary Energy ......... ............................. 71 74 Primary Energy Consumption ........................ 72 ; 75 Primary Energy, by Type ............................ 73 ' 76 Proved Reserves of Crude Oil, Natural Gas, and Coal. 74 77 Crude Oil Refining Capacity ......................... 75 ~ 78 Crude Oil ............................................ 76 79 Oil Trade and Consumption ......................... 77 80 Petroleum Products ................................. 78 81 Natural Gas .......................................... 79 82 Hard Coal ............................................ 80 ; 83 Brown Coal and Lignite .............................. 81 ~ ~. 84 Electric Power ........ .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ........... 82 ~ 85 Electric Power Generating Capacity .................. 83 86 Nuclear Power Generating Capacity ................. 84 I , MINERALS AND METALS 87 Iron Ore .................... ......................... 85 l I 88 Manganese Ore ...................................... 86 ~ 89 Tungsten Ore ......... .. ............................. 87 90 Chromite ............................................ 87 i 91 Bauxite ............... .. .. ........................... 88 i 92 Metallurgical Coke ................................... 89 93 Pig Iron .............................................. 90 ~ , 94 Crude Steel .......................................... 91 ', 95 Rolled Steel ............. .. .. ......................... 92 ; 96 Refined Copper ...................................... 93 97 Refined Nickel ....................................... 94 98 Primary Aluminum .................................. 95 99 Smelter Lead ........................................ 96 100 Refined Zinc ........ .. ............................... 97 101 Molybdenum .......... ............................... 98 102 Cobalt ............................................... 98 j 103 Titanium Sponge Metal .............................. 99 I 104 Primary Tin Metal ....... .. .......................... 99 105 Primary Magnesium .... ............................. 100 106 Gotd ................................................. 100 ~ CHEMICALS AND RUBBER 107 Caustic Soda ........................................ 101 108 Synthetic Ammonia .................................. 102 I 109 Sulfuric Acid .......... .. .. ........................... 103 110 Mineral Fertilizer .................................... 104 ' 111 Nitrogen Fertilizer ................................... 105 ' 112 Phosphorus Fertilizer ..... ........................... 106 ~ 113 Potassium Fertilizer ................................. 107 1 i vi Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 t TABLE PAGE 114 Plastics .............................................. 107 115 Synthetic Rubber .................................... 108 116 Natural Rubber ...................................... 108 CONSUMER GOODS, PRODUCERS' 117 Woven Cotton Fabrics .......... ..................... 109 GOODS, AND CONSTRUCTION 118 Woven Woolen Fabrics .............................. 110 119 Woven Rayon and Acetate Fabrics .... ............... 111 120 Synthetic Fibers ..................................... 112 121 Electric Motors ....... ............................... 112 122 Electric Generators ... ............................... 113 123 Turbines ............................................. 113 124 Metalcutting Machine Tools ......................... 114 125 Metalforming Machine Tools ........................ 114 126 Grain Combines ...... ............................... 115 127 Tractors ............................................. 115 128-129 Mainline Locomotives ................................ 116 130 Railroad Freight Cars ................................ 117 131 Automobiles ......................................... 117 132 Trucks and Buses ................................... 118 133 Rubber Tires ........... .. ........................... 119 134 Television Receivers ............ .. ................... 120 135 Radio Receivers .......... ........................... 121 136 Housing Construction ................................ 121 137 Cement ................. ............................. 122 AGRICULTURE 138 Total Grain .......................................... 123 139 Wheat ....................... .. .. .................... 124 140 Coarse Grain ........................................ 125 141 Rice .................................. ................ 126 142 Potatoes ............................................. 127 143 Sugar ................. ............................... 128 144 Fish Catch .............. .. .. .. .. ..................... 129 145 Cattle ................. ............................... 130 146 Hogs ......................... .. .. ..................... 131 147 Meat .................... ............................. 132 148 Milk ................... .. .. .. .. .. ..................... 133 149 Wool.....? ............................................ 134 150 Ginned Cotton .......... .. .. .. .. .. .. ................. 135 151 Mineral Fertilizer Consumption ....... .. ............. 136 152 Nitrogen Fertilizer Consumption ..................... 137 153 Phosphorus Fertilizer Consumption .................. 138 154 Potassium Fertilizer Consumption ................... 139 TRANSPORTATION 155-156 Railroad Freight ...... .. .. .. ......................... 141-142 157-158 Motor Vehicle Freight ................................ 143 159-160 Inland Water Freight ................................. 144 161 Air Passengers ...................................... 145 162 Air Freight ............ .. .. ........................... 145 163 Civil Air Inventory ............. .. ..................... 146 164 Ocean Freight ........................................ 146 165-166 Petroleum Pipelines ...... ........................... 146-147 167 Mainline Locomotives Inventory ..................... 147 168 Railroad Freight Car Inventory ....................... 148 169 Civilian Trucks Inventory ... ......................... 149 170 Fishing Fleet Inventory .............................. 149 171 Merchant Fleet Inventory ............................ 150 172 Tanker Fleet Inventory ................ ............... 151 173 Offloading Ports Accessible to Fully Loaded Tankers of 200,000 Deadweight Tons and Larger.......... 152 COMMUNICATIONS 174 Telephones in Use .... ............................... 153 175 Radio Receivers in Public Use ....................... 154 176 Television Receivers in Public Use .................. 155 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 MORE TH'AN~ $6,500 ICEL-A'ND KUWAIT , UNITED -ARAB $5.,00..1-6,500 DENMARK, FRANCE GREENLAND LI ECHTENSTEI N NORWAY SWITZERLAND . UNITED STATES WEST GERMANY $1",701-5,000 ANDORRA AUSTF2A'L'I A BELGIUM: . CZECHOSLOVAKIA EAST`GERMANY F,4EROE ISLANDS FINLA'ND~ GREECE IRELAND ? I'SR'AEL' ITALY JAPAN LIBYA LUXEMBOURG MONACO NAURU: ? NEW 3ZEALAND POLAND PUERTO RICO ROMANIA F `~ SINGAPORE SPAIN 1,001=1,700, ' NA AR:GENTI BAHRAIN' BRCJNEI . CYPRUS.. FALKLAND ISLANDS. (MALVINAS) HONG KONG NETHERLANDS ANTILLES. REPUBLfC OF VENEZUELA YUGOSLAVIA ~56C989'6-.75 ... SOUTH $801-1,000 CHILE "' ,FRENCH GUTANA~J : , GABON k GUADELOUPE' ` IRAN . . IRAO. _ w. ~ LEBANON MAF2TINLQUE 1VIEXICO , PANAMA.. RYUKI'US "., '' 'SOUTH'-WEST AFRICA: TRINAD`AD AND TOBAGO URUGUAY w $601-800" . ..k . ~ .. , ALGERIA AMEF2ICAN' SAMOA _ BARBADOS.; ?BRAZIL ~" FRENCH" TERRITORY OF AFARS AND fSSAS GIBRALTAR'? r,. JAMA'ICA' `, REUNION `SURINA,M' TAIWAN.., $401-600 ' .. ANTIGUA BELIZE. - COLOMBIA COSTA ? RICA' CUBA` _ ~`: DOMINICAN REPUBLfC ECUADOR FIJI .- GUATEIVIALA' MALAYSIA I~ , MONGOLIA NICARAGUA :, PERU TURKEY ZAMBPA $201-400.., k o ALBANIA ? ANGOLA:, BOLIVIA BOTSWANA .. CONGO ~. ? DOMINIICA , EGYPT EL SAL' VADO~F2 E'QUATORIAL` GUINEA GF-1A"NA , GRENADA GUYANA Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 $ 201-400 HONDURAS IVORY -COAST JORDAN LIBERIA MAURITANIA MAURITIUS MOROCCO MOZAMBIQUE NIGERIA NORTH KOREA PAPUA NEW GUINEA PARAGUAY PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF CHINA PHILIPPINES PORTUGUESE GUINEA RHODESIA ST. KITTS -NEVIS - ANGUILLA ST. LUCIA ST. VINCENT SENEGAL SOUTH KOREA SPANISH SAHARA SWAZILAND SYRIA THAILAND TUNISIA WESTERN SAMOA LESS THAN $201 AFGHANISTAN BANGLADESH BHUTAN BURMA BURUNDI CAMBODIA CAMEROON CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC CHAD DAHOMEY ETHIOPIA GAMBIA GUINEA HAITI INDIA INDONESIA KENYA LAOS LESOTHO MACAO MALAGASY REPUBLIC MALAWI MALDIVES MALI NEPAL NIGER PAKISTAN PORTUGUESE TIMOR RWANDA SEYCHELLES SIERRA LEONE SOMALIA SRI LANKA SUDAN TANZANIA TOGO TONGA UGANDA UPPER VOLTA VIETNAM YEMEN (NORTH ) YEMEN (SOUTH ) ZAIRE Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 WORLD GROSS NATIONAL PRODUCT, 1974 West Germany EUROPEAN COMMUNITY 22.0 COMMUNIST COUNTRIES 24..7 LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES 10.9 TOTAL: 4,820 BILLION 1973 US $ Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 DEVELOPED COUNTRIES: Deviations of Real Gross National Product from the Long-Term Trend1 West Germany 5r 5 ~f953 t 1964 r 1965 r 1966 ~ 1967 r 1968 ~ 1969 ~ 1970 ~ 1971 ~ 1972 ~ 1973 ~ 1974 Annual. Rate of Growth in Long-Term Trend During 1964-74 ~ The long-term trend is a 25-quarter moving average of seasonally adjusted GNP values at constant prices. Trend values for 1972-74 were obtained by extrapolating the growth rate indicated by the moving averages for 1970-71. 566775 6-75 O Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 United States USSR Relative to the British Pound Relative to the Japanese Yen Trade-Weighted Average Value of the DollarZ Relative to the French Franc Relative to the West German Mark Gross Investment as a Share of Gross National Products Foreign Exchange Value of the US Dollars Figure 4 1Percent change in the value of the US f)ollar relative to selected foreign currencies compared with January 1973. ZRelative to 16 major currencies. Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 DEVELOPED COUNTRIES: Changes in Real Gross National Product Figure 5 Percent Change over Previous Period (semiannual data at annual rates, seasonally adjusted 1 116 3.0 -- -~ I) 2.7 ? L C] -0.6 _1,1 _2.0 1973 1974 73 74 I II I II ANNUAL SEMIANNUAL Total for six foreign countries 9.7 0.7 -1.5 _2.0 0.3 -0.5 1973 1974 73 74 I II I II ANNUAL SEMIANNUAL West Germany -2.4 1973 1974 73 74 I II I II Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Real Gross National Product Trends Major Free World and C o m m un i st_ C nunxries Figure 6 DedeVoped and Less Developed-Countries INDEX: 1960=100 AVERAGE ANNUAL RATE OF GROWTH DURING 1961-74 5.7% USSR1 Per Capita GNP 1960 62 64 66 68 70 72 74 1960 62 64 66 68 70 72 74 tFactor cost. 3.8% -, 3.2% Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 WORLD OIL, 1974 PROVED OIL RESERVES PERCENT NIGERIA AIGERIA 1.2 PRODUCTION1 PERCENT CONSUMPTION PERCENT Japan 9 0 15.9 United States 29.9 MIDDLE f9 2 8.8 25.5 United EAST ~, `,' Other Africa States ~~~ 2.2` Western Europe Arabia 6ibya Othht Middle East TOTAL: 55,785 THOUSAND B/D ~ Excluding natural gas liquids. Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Agricultural Production Figure 8 Industrial Production Figure 9 4o L I I I I I I I I I 4o I I I I I I I I I I 1965 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 1965 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 DEVELOPED COUNTRIES: lzo Industrial Capacity and Production Trends Index: 1970 =100 seasonalty adjusted France 100 130 r ~ 130 United Kingdom 140 r Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Commodity Price Trends 1,000 r Copper' 401 I I I I I I I I I 1965 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 [Landon Metal Exchange (LMEi. 2LME refined pip lead, minimum 99.77%. aLME electrolytic wirebars. 4Virgin unalloyed ingot at New York 5667821375 Sugar' Soybeans' Corn' 40I I I I I I I I I I 1965 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 [flaw cane, 96?, spot, i.o.h. and stowed, ports of origin, to world market. 2US Na. 2, hard winter, ordinary protein, f.o.b. vessel, Gulf parts. 3US No. 2 yellow. f.o.b. vassal, Gulf ports. 4American, Memphis Territory, strict middling, t-1 /16", c.i.f. Liverpool. 5 From Santos, No. 4, New York spot. Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Figure 12 DEVELOPED COUNTRIES: Wholesale and Consumer Price Trends Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Other Developed Countries 94.3 13,5 Japan 5.8 United S 16.1 ~`~~'" 5.3 Belgium +N' 8.9 France s.s Italy 7.0 6.9 Netherlands 32.4 United Kingdom ?'? Other European Community EUROPEAN COMMUNITY 69.6 1 Including gold and foreign exchange. Data for the non-Communist countries also include Special Drawing Rights and the reserve position in the International Monetary Fund. INTERNATIONAL RESERVES1, 1974 Figure 13 BILLION US $ LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES 94.7 58.4 Spain Brazil 5.3 Saudi rabiiw -1d,3 6.5 ~ 15,8 DEVELOPED COUNTRIES 62.4 United States (Excluding Department of Defense shipments) COMMUNIST COUNTRIES Eastern Europe WORLD EXPORTS1, 1974 EUROPEAN COMMUNITY 32.6 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 OECD COUNTRIES: Shifts in Trade Balances Billion US $ Combined Trade Balances of the Big Three West Germany, Japan, and the United States With Other OECD Countries With OPEC Countries ~- With Non-Oil LDC s Communist Count ~a a %'I' Figure 15 and ies With Non-Oil LDC s and Communist Countries With the With OPEC Big Three Countries Communist wutrtries nil. Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Figure 16 DEVELOPED COUNTRIES: Oil and Non-Oil Trade Balance ~ 7 0 ~ . 1973 France 3.7 1 ~ 1973 _2 3 i Italy -3.6 -9.0 -8.0 -7.2 Non-Oil Trade 27.2 -53.4 1974 -2.2 _3.7 -5.9 1973 ( 1974 ', Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 MINERALS: Imports as a Share of Consumption, 1973 UNITED STATES EUROPEAN COMMUNITY Approved For Release 2011/01/24 :CIA-RDP07-006178000200230001-5 ~~r~~;.~.~?~.;:>:> ar~~ ?. ~r. ~~Yrn r ~ - o C n n. J o 7G ? 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