Search

Emerging markets drive international express market growth, global report finds

UPS

The international express market has shaken off the global financial crisis with solid averageannual volume growth of 7% a year over the last five years, driven by emerging markets, according

to a new report commissioned by the Global Express Association.

The international express delivery has thus shown solid growth following the global financialcrisis and has grown faster than world trade over the 2009 – 2013 period, the study by FrontierEconomics found.

However, there has been a slowdown in growth rates. Volumes increased by 6% in 2009, 12% in 2010and 6% in 2011, as the sector recovered from the global economic crisis, and then more moderatelyby 4% in 2012 and 5% in 2013, according to figures from the GEA members (DHL, FedEx, TNT andUPS).

According to the report, Europe is the largest regional market with about 47% of volumes, basedon the sum of outbound and inbound cross-border volumes. Asia Pacific follows with 25%, ahead ofNorth America (21%), Middle East & Africa (4%) and Central & South America (3%).

However, growth has been strongest in regions outside of Europe and North America in recentyears, the report found. The Middle East & Africa and Central & South America were thefast-growing regions between 2011 and 2013, although from low base figures.

Asia Pacific generated strong growth in flows to Europe (+22%) but low growth to North America(+4%), Europe had single-digit growth to North America (+8%) and Asia (5%), while North Americashowed 4% growth to Asia and a 2% volume decline to Europe, according to the report.
 
The express delivery industry facilitated some three million jobs in 2013 and had a totaleconomic impact of over $140 billion, or nearly 0.2% of global GDP, the report said.

Webinar on recent changes in European postal regulation - May 15th
DELIVER Europe Event - June 4-5, Amsterdam
Read exclusive articles reporting on recent Leaders in Logistics events

© 2025 CEP Research copyright all rights reserved.