FACTOID # 128: The average person in the United Kingdom drinks as much tea as 23 Italians.
 
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Economy > Trade with US > US imports of parts for civilian aircraft (vs) Military > Conventional arms exports

VIEW DATA:   Comparison scatterplot  
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    Flags   Circles (same size)   Circles (by population)   Circles (by GDP)   Circles (by land area)  
2.12 billion
Military > Conventional arms exports
1 million
0 Economy > Trade with US > US imports of parts for civilian aircraft 538,847

Move your mouse over the circles to view country names, and then click to view their profiles.
Note: It will take several minutes to draw this plot the first time you view it. After that all plots should appear much more quickly.
Strength of correlation (R squared): 0.838 (this correlation is strong)
Outliers: Canada, United Kingdom, Japan, Russia

X Axis Y Axis
Variable: Economy > Trade with US > US imports of parts for civilian aircraft Military > Conventional arms exports
Plot Display: Logarithmic (base 10) Logarithmic (base 10)
Definition: US imports of parts for civilian aircraft, USD Thousands, 2004 Conventional arms transfers (1990 prices) - Exports (US$ millions) Refers to the voluntary transfer by the supplier (and thus excludes captured weapons and weapons obtained through defectors) of weapons with a military purpose destined for the armed forces, paramilitary forces or intelligence agencies of another country. These include major conventional weapons or systems in six categories: ships, aircraft, missiles, artillery, armoured vehicles and guidance and radar systems (excluded are trucks, services, ammunition, small arms, support items, components and component technology and towed or naval artillery under 100-millimetre calibre).
Source: FTDWebMaster, Foreign Trade Division, U.S. Census Bureau SIPRI (Stockholm International Peace Research Institute). 2005. SIPRI Arms Transfers. Database. February. Stockholm.
Correlations:
      More correlations »     More correlations »
 

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