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Mexico replaced China as America's top trade buddy — and it shows how the global economy is rapidly transforming

Hamartia Antidote

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Meet America's new, old best friend in the world economy.

According to a new post from Luis Torres, a senior business economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Mexico has once again cemented its place as America's top trading partner, with $263 billion worth of goods passing between the two countries in the first four months of this year. Trade with Mexico accounted for 15.4% of goods exported and imported by the US, just ahead of America's trade totals with Canada and China, which were 15.2% and 12% respectively.

Even as the world moves on from the height of the pandemic, Mexico's ability to take the top spot away from China — which had spent the last two decades integrating itself further into the US economy — is a clear sign of how the economic chaos of 2020 is set to continue to define the world economy for years to come.

Torres said the seeds for this shift were sown before the pandemic — with former President Donald Trump's tariffs on some Chinese goods and the signing of the US-Canada-Mexico trade deal, a slight update of the nearly three-decades-old NAFTA deal. But Torres said the changes also suggested an accelerated shift toward "nearshoring," a practice in which countries bring supply chains for crucial goods to countries that are close physically and politically.

"While data on recent nearshoring is thin and evidence of it is largely anecdotal, increased protectionism and related industrial policy are consistent with less global trade, more regional trade, and nearshoring and reshoring (returning production to the home country)," Torres wrote.

Nearshoring increased during the pandemic because of the increased cost of shipping products across the Pacific and the consumer demand for faster delivery times — we'll call the latter "The Amazon Prime Effect." The New York Times' Peter S. Goodman also wrote earlier this year that companies like Walmart were increasingly looking closer to home for ways to fill their needs as political tensions between the US and China heated up.

"It's not about deglobalization," Michael Burns, a managing partner at Murray Hill Group, an investment firm focused on the supply chain, told Goodman. "It's the next stage of globalization that is focused on regional networks."


Trucks carrying shipping containers lining up at a checkpoint near on a wide, five-lane road.

Trucks at the Port of Manzanillo, Mexico. Salwan Georges/The Washington Post via Getty Images
In Shannon O'Neil's new book, "The Globalization Myth: Why Regions Matter," she made the case for regionalization over globalization and said that keeping production closer to home would help American workers. In his review of O'Neil's book, Greg Rosalsky of NPR summed up the argument:

"O'Neil writes that the average import from Mexico is '40% US made,' meaning that 40% of the parts that go into the end product are still produced in the US. The average Canadian import, meanwhile, is 25% made in the US. 'As for a product coming in from China? Just 4% of it was made in the USA,' she writes."

Still, in recent months, President Joe Biden has sought to improve the relationship between the US and China after seeing the fracturing grow in recent years, including the shooting down of a Chinese spy balloon in February. Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with China's leader, Xi Jinping, in June, and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen recently made a four-day trip to China.

Blinken and Xi pledged to stabilize the relationship between China and the US. Meanwhile, Yellen voiced concerns about "unfair economic practices" but said she hoped the two sides could work closer because "the world is big enough for both of our countries to thrive."

With pieces in constant motion, especially with China, one thing is clear for now: trade between Mexico and the US appears to be as strong as ever and should continue to grow.
 
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Mexico is growing, after USSR collapse, it has more sense for USA long-term interests a rich Mexico than a rich Europe.
 
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Lol, Mexico doesn't have that kind of excess manufacturing capacity to quickly scale up and replace China.
All Mexico is doing - import from China and send it to US.
Actually it's not the Mexico that is doing it, it is done by US importers and they must have simply found some people willing to let thier company names being used by US importers while earning some money.
 
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Lol, Mexico doesn't have that kind of excess manufacturing capacity to quickly scale up and replace China.

All Mexico is doing - import from China and send it to US.

Importing what? What brands do you think are risking being outed by pulling this switcheroo?

Actually it's not the Mexico that is doing it, it is done by US importers and they must have simply found some people willing to let thier company names being used by US importers while earning some money.
You mean companies that sell in lowly dollar stores/flea markets or something?
What mainstream company do you think is risking it all for this?


If the US was dominated by little no-name foreign brands I could see this switcheroo happening...as they wouldn't care.
 
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I'm no Mexico/us expert.
But it's common sense, No country has that much excess manufacturing, Not even communist.
It doesn't make sense that u have that much manufacturing lying around that Mexico can replace China within 10yr.
And Mexico has done it it within 3-4 yrs.
But if Mexico has pulled this off good for you.

But I would suggest u should study the import data to see if there's any major jump in imports from China to Mexico .
It will make u understand better.
 
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I'm no Mexico/us expert.
But it's common sense, No country has that much excess manufacturing, Not even communist.
It doesn't make sense that u have that much manufacturing lying around that Mexico can replace China within 10yr.

Why do you think Mexico needed some big jump???????
Mexico wasn't changing much...but China was

dfe0711c1.png
 
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Lol, Mexico doesn't have that kind of excess manufacturing capacity to quickly scale up and replace China.
All Mexico is doing - import from China and send it to US.
Actually it's not the Mexico that is doing it, it is done by US importers and they must have simply found some people willing to let thier company names being used by US importers while earning some money.
Except Mexico imports more that half its intermediate goods from the US not China.
So your brilliant theory isn’t as brilliant as you think it is.Also relabeling Chinese goods as Made in Mexico isn’t going to make it exempt from import duties.
Since relabeling isn’t considered ‘Substantial transformation’ the country of origin will remain China although the item was exported to the US from Mexico.

Abraham Lincoln “Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and to remove all doubt


How to qualify for tariff-free Imports under the USMCA

To be eligible for the USMCA and enjoy tariff-free or reduced tariffs, some criteria must be met. Businesses are required to seek clearance from the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and provide documentation of the commodity, including the Certification of Origin.

The Certification of Origin can be in any format and may be completed by either the importer, exporter, or producer. This will consist of details of the importer, exporter, producer(s), Harmonized System (HS) classification of the goods as well as the origin criteria.

 
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Western nations made a big mistake to allow China into WTO

they relied on one single manufacturer for everything

Chinese then said thanks by sending fake goods all over the World counterfeit everything and anything

these copycats have been banned in UK who do nothing but steal others IP

Huawei did it and now they make batteries for e-bikes

they then said thanks again by exporting COVID
 
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Lol, Mexico doesn't have that kind of excess manufacturing capacity to quickly scale up and replace China.
All Mexico is doing - import from China and send it to US.
Actually it's not the Mexico that is doing it, it is done by US importers and they must have simply found some people willing to let thier company names being used by US importers while earning some money.
Mexico has always been a manufacturing country for USA, real manufacturing, it's not reselling.

There is a lot of unemployment in Central America, if USA invest in Mexico to create industry, they will be employed.

USA current long term interest is do it.

China will be every day more picky to their customers, they can afford it.
 
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Isn't it good both for China and US? China now is also shifting to emerging economies.
 
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It takes time to set up new supply chains, but the trend of the US and the West moving away from China is clear. There will be more manufacturing in USA and countries like India. Vietnam and those in Latin America and Eastern Europe will benefit.

The rising wages in China were anyway making labour arbitrage more difficult and the Chinese government has been try to stimulate domestic consumption to replace export demand. It remains to be seen if they succeed.
 
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US exports to Mexico have lots of Chinese elements

INSIGHTS

  • In H1 2023, although Mexico became the US' top general trade partner, China remained the leading textile supplier.
  • US exported 28.05 per cent of textile and apparel to Mexico, with a total export value of $3.459 billion.
  • US textile and apparel exports were $22.652 billion and $24.866 billion in 2021 and 2022, while imports dropped 22.69 per cent in H1 2023.
 
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