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DHL Global Connectedness Report 2024

Vivien Christel Vella
Vivien Christel Vella
4 min read
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DHL Global Connectedness Report 2024

What does the future of globalisation hold? The disruptions caused by the Covid-19 pandemic are now clearly in the past, and its economic aftereffects are receding. However, the United Nations now reports the largest number of violent conflicts since the Second World War, and geopolitical rivalry over key technologies continues to escalate.

Amidst these volatilities, it’s more important than ever to base business decisions on facts – which is what the latest, tenth edition of the DHL Global Connectedness Report will enable you to do. Discover key global trade trends to empower your strategies for successful cross-border trade.

Whilst the benefits of globalisation are typically equated with cross-border trade, the DHL Global Connectedness Report 2024 takes a broader view, drawing on nearly 9 million data points to provide a comprehensive portrait of international flows of capital, information and people, too. It measures not just the size of these flows, but which other countries each country interacts with – making it a unique index in terms of both size and its scope of geographic patterns.

Firstly, the flow of trade – how much a country exports and imports goods and services and how broadly a country’s trade is spread around the world. Secondly, the flow of capital, meaning the investment that goes in and out of a country. Thirdly, the flow of information between a country and others, such as online news traffic, scientific research collaboration, and international internet bandwidth. And finally, the flow of people, including the level and geographic reach of a country’s international travel and migration.

With a detailed ranking and analyses of 181 countries, the DHL Global Connectedness Report has unrivalled insights into global trade trends, making it a must read for any business with international growth ambitions.

“There is no better index that measures the overall global connectedness of nations […] An absolutely indispensable reference for discussions on the state of globalisation, including debates on whether it is moving forward or backwards.”

“There is no better index that measures the overall global connectedness of nations […] An absolutely indispensable reference for discussions on the state of globalisation, including debates on whether it is moving forward or backwards.”

Dani Rodrik, Ford Foundation Professor of International Political Economy at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government

DHL Global Connectedness Report 2024: 10 Key Takeaways

1. Globalisation at a record high

The world has endured several shocks over the past decade, including the war in Ukraine, and the Covid-19 pandemic, which disrupted global supply chains to an extent never seen before. Naturally, these events prompted much analysis about the challenges of globalisation. Yet, in defiance of such expectations, global connectedness reached a record high in 2022, and remained close to that level in 2023.

2. Singapore’s global connectedness takes the crown

Despite a population of just 5.6 million1, Singapore’s low taxes, excellent infrastructure, strong banking sectors, and almost entirely urban population have helped make it one of the world’s most advanced economies, whilst its major port operations means it’s uniquely positioned to excel in globalisation. Today it enjoys the title of the world’s most connected country.

3. US-China trade relations: a turbulent road

Relations between the superpowers are stabilised but precarious. Rising tensions led to the two countries pulling back from direct trade with each other in 2023. There are also recent declines in the shares of capital, information and people flows crossing between the US and China. Yet, they still show no real decoupling – they remain connected by larger flows than almost every other pair of countries.

4. Russia-Europe trade routes broken

Over the last couple of years, Russia’s trade has shifted away from Western-aligned countries, and foreign investment into the country has collapsed. Perhaps unsurprisingly, in 2022, it had the largest single-year drop in global connectedness on record for a major economy – proof, if needed, of the detrimental impact of severing cross-border trade flows. 

5. Global flows not split by geopolitical blocs  

Rising tensions between the US and China have prompted fears that a new cold war could fracture the global economy into rival blocs. Yet, the share of trade happening between US-aligned and China aligned-blocs (excluding Russia) is now roughly back to its pre-pandemic level.

6. Globalisation holds off regionalisation

Despite geopolitical tensions and concerns about supply chain resilience, globalisation has not given way to regionalisation. Most international flows are taking place over stable or longer distances, bolstered by the growth of emerging economies. Focusing on trade, only North America shows a clear nearshoring trend.

“The data shows that there has been no retreat from international to domestic business activity … The resilience of global flows in the face of formidable threats sends a strong message about the value of a connected world.”

“The data shows that there has been no retreat from international to domestic business activity … The resilience of global flows in the face of formidable threats sends a strong message about the value of a connected world.”

Steven A. Altman, Senior Research Scholar and Director of the DHL Initiative on Globalisation, NYU Stern

7. Corporate globalisation continues to advance

Global flows are being driven by businesses investing heavily in international expansion projects – the value of which is at its highest level relative to world GDP in more than a decade. The cross-border share of mergers and acquisitions is holding steady, too.

8. Trade forecast to accelerate

The Covid-19 pandemic drove the share of trade in global economic output to a record high in 2022. But in 2023, slowing macroeconomic growth on the heels of large interest rate increases in many countries led to a modest pullback in global trade intensity. 2024’s forecast looks bright: trade growth is expected to accelerate to a slightly faster pace than GDP growth.

9. Information flows are stalling

Over the past two decades, information flows have reached the highest level of globalisation compared to the other three flow types. Yet, the trend stalled in 2022 and 2023, suggesting geopolitical tensions and policy restrictions on data flows may be starting to have a meaningful impact.  

10. Globalisation has potential for growth  

Domestic flows still far exceed international flows, and the world’s current depth of global connectedness is only 25% – on a scale from 0% (no flows cross national borders) to 100% (borders and distance no longer matter at all).

“Globalisation is not over, nor should anyone wish for it to be. But it needs to be improved and reimagined for the age ahead.”

“Globalisation is not over, nor should anyone wish for it to be. But it needs to be improved and reimagined for the age ahead.”

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Director General of the World Trade Organisation

Since the last edition of this report was released a year ago, some of the challenges of globalisation have eased while others have intensified, leading to conflicting forecasts for the future. But the DHL Global Connectedness Report goes beyond the headlines to examine the cold, hard data on the real state of globalisation.

Discover insights about emerging markets and global trade growth to empower your cross-border trading decisions with the DHL Global Connectedness Report. Who knows where it could take your business…