2
October
2006
We just filed this story on our web site:
As U.S. troops continue fighting in Afghanistan in an attempt to beat back a resurgent Taliban and track down Osama bin Laden, the Central Asian nation’s appetite for U.S. exports is nevertheless at an all-time high.
More
Posted: International trade, Import Export Statistics, Trade Deficit, Miami, New York, Manufacturing
5
September
2006
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has produced an interesting report about the benefits of international trade to the U.S. business and consumer — everything from price reductions on goods we buy to job creation from increased imports.
“The facts will show,” the chamber’s president and CEO Thomas Donohue writes in an introduction, ”that while some are hurt and should be helped, the overwhelming majority of Americans derive great benefits from global engagement.”
You can take a look at it or download it by clicking here.
Posted: International trade, Import Export Statistics, Trade Deficit, China, Mexico, Manufacturing, Maritime
31
August
2006
Some little nuggets for your consideration …1. Deficit, deficit, deficit. It’s all you hear. But while the the United States had trade deficits with 118 nations in 2005, it had trade surpluses with 112.
2. Of course, that’s not the whole story. The record $201 billion U.S. deficit with China in 2005 was more than three times greater than the total of all those surpluses combined.
3. Canada is overwhelmingly the nation’s leading trade partner and is on course to surpass one half trillion dollars in trade in 2006, the first nation to cross the $500 billion mark.
4. The U.S. could surpass $100 billion in exports to the world in 2006, surpassing that milestone for the first time, when annual figures are released.
5. Only one of the nation’s leading Customs districts has had a trade surplus every year the last decade: Miami.
6. Los Angeles has the nation’s biggest trade deficit.
7. Many U.S. airports have trade surpluses while most seaports have deficits. That is due to the nature of their trade.
8. Houston has been the nation’s fastest-growing Customs district, in dollar terms, the last couple of years because of one thing – the rising price of oil.
9. Detroit leads the nation in exports, and surpassed $105 billion in 2005, the first Customs district to ever pass $100 billion. Detroit is the nation’s third-ranked Customs district overall, behind Los Angeles and New York.
10. China, which only recently Japan to become the United States’ No. 3 ranked trade partner, is likely to surpass Mexico and become the nation’s No. 2 trade partner when 2006 figures are released.
11. The Savannah Customs district, which includes Atlanta and the rest of Georgia, is likely to surpass Buffalo and leap into the Top 10 in 2006.
12. The United States’ second-largest trade deficit is with Canada followed by Mexico.
Posted: International trade, Import Export Statistics, Trade Deficit, China, Los Angeles, Houston, Miami, New York, Detroit, Canada, Mexico, Oil, Savannah, Atlanta, Japan