Mali: Current account, percent of GDP

* indicates monthly or quarterly data series
 Mali

Current account balance as percent of GDP

 Latest value -6.49
 Year 2023
 Measure percent
 Data availability 1975 - 2023
 Average -6.17
 Min - Max -13.15 - 0.51
 Source The World Bank
The latest value from 2023 is -6.49 percent, an increase from -6.55 percent in 2022. In comparison, the world average is -1.04 percent, based on data from 165 countries. Historically, the average for Mali from 1975 to 2023 is -6.17 percent. The minimum value, -13.15 percent, was reached in 1985 while the maximum of 0.51 percent was recorded in 1977. See the global rankings or world map for that indicator or use the country comparator to compare trends over time.
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* indicates monthly or quarterly data series


Recent data
Mali - Current account, percent of GDP - Recent values chart

Historical series
Mali - Current account, percent of GDP - historical chart - 1975-2023




The current account of Mali and other countries has three components: 1) the exports of goods and services minus the imports of goods and services; 2) the difference of incomes that countries pay to each other; and 3) the difference in transfers that countries make to each other. Current account deficits are reported with a minus sign and surpluses are reported with a plus sign.

A current account deficit means that the country needs to find financing for its imports. The foreign currencies it receives from selling products abroad are not enough to pay for the products it wants to buy from other countries. The needed amounts of foreign currencies can be obtained by, for example, borrowing. For instance, in the last several years the U.S. has been borrowing money from China in order to buy Chinese products.

This is not necessarily a problem. The current account deficit starts to be a problem if it exceeds 3-4 percent of GDP for many years. Over that time, the country accumulates a significant amount of foreign debt that eventually has to be repaid.
Definition: Balance of current transactions (transactions in goods and services, earned income and transfer income) between residents and non-residents. The term current account balance is used in the external accounts and is expressed from the perspective of resident units. The term current external balance is used in the national accounts and is expressed from the perspective of the non-resident units, and therefore with the opposite sign. This indicator is expressed as a percentage of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) which is the total income earned through the production of goods and services in an economic territory during an accounting period.

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 Related indicators Latest Reference Measure
 Terms of trade 117.60 2023 percent
 Trade openness 50.90 2024 percent
 Financial openness -1.248 2022 index points
 Exports, percent of GDP 22.52 2024 percent
 Exports, billion dollars 5.99 2024 billion U.S. dollars
 Growth of exports 0.10 2024 percent
 Imports, percent of GDP 28.38 2024 percent
 Imports, billion dollars 7.55 2024 billion U.S. dollars
 Foreign Direct Investment, percent of GDP 2.85 2023 percent
 Foreign Direct Investment, billion dollars 0.71 2024 billion U.S. dollars
 Portfolio investment inflows, equities -103.70 2023 million dollars (current)
 Current account, percent of GDP -6.49 2023 percent
 Trade balance, percent of GDP -5.87 2024 percent
 Trade balance, in dollars -1.94 2023 billion U.S. dollars
 Remittances, percent of GDP 5.52 2023 percent
 Remittances 1,045.13 2023 million U.S. dollars
 Net errors and omissions -19.80 2023 million USD
 External debt 30.48 2023 percent
 Short-term external debt 1.01 2023 percent
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