There is a level of proportionality between the share of the urban population and the Logistics Performance Index (LPI); the higher the share of the urban population, the higher the LPI (statistically significant R square of 0.37). The size of each observation is related to the national population living in cities of more than 1 million inhabitants. For instance, China, with an urban population of 46% of its total population, has a population of 224 million inhabitants living in cities of more than 1 million inhabitants with a national LPI of 3.49. The positive outliers (above the trend line) are countries having a high dependence on international trade and thus well-developed logistical structures (e.g. Germany, Japan, China, South Korea). The negative outliers (below the trend line) tend to be countries with more limited participation in international trade with deficient transport infrastructure and governance issues (e.g. Brazil, Russia, Nigeria).