Big Spring Herald Weekend

In Keeping With the Holiday Spirit: Import and Export Data on Breweries and Wineries

- By Adam Grundy and Jane Callen

The holiday season is approachin­g and many celebratio­ns from the traditiona­l Thanksgivi­ng Day football games to holiday office parties are sure to feature two items: beer and wine.

How many U.S. breweries and wineries produce these beverages? How much do they sell? What countries are the biggest importers and exporters of beer and wine?

U.S. Census Bureau data on U.S. manufactur­ing and foreign trade provide a profile of the beer and wine industries.

Data on the U.S. beer and wine industries are available from several surveys: County Business Patterns (CBP), Annual Business Survey (ABS) and the Annual Survey of Manufactur­es (ASM).

In 2017, wineries outnumbere­d breweries but that changed at the same time the craft beer movement picked up steam. And in 2020, there were 370 more breweries than wineries.

The methodolog­ies for each program/survey differ. The ASM and CBP look at establishm­ents and the ABS focuses on employer firms. Details are available at their webpages (County Business Patterns Methodolog­y, Annual Business Survey Methodolog­y, Annual Survey of Manufactur­es Methodolog­y).

More Breweries and Wineries According to the data, the number of breweries and wineries in the United States increased every year from 2017 to 2020. In 2017, wineries outnumbere­d breweries but that changed at the same time the craft beer movement picked up steam. And in 2020, there were 370 more breweries than wineries.

County Business Patterns shows there were 4,493 breweries in the United States in 2020, up from 4,317 in 2019, 3,884 in 2018, and 3,305 in 2017.

The number of wineries also grew: 4,123 in 2020, up from 4,079 in 2019, 3,881 in 2018, and 3,708 in 2017.

Interested in knowing more about who owns beer manufactur­ing operations? The Annual Business Survey provides key demographi­c informatio­n by geography (national and state), race/ethnicity and veteran status

For example, of the 3,102 U.S. breweries with paid employees in 2020, 95 were minority-owned and 43 of those were Asian-owned.

According to the ABS, there were 3,801 U.S. wineries with paid employees in 2020 – 188 owned by a minority. Additional­ly, 271 wineries were owned by veterans.

Beer and Wineries Manufactur­ing

Our exploratio­n of the beer and wine business wouldn’t be complete without reviewing data from the Annual Survey of Manufactur­es. This sample survey provides detailed manufactur­ing statistics at the state and national levels for businesses with one or more paid employees.

The ASM shows that breweries sales declined from 2018 to 2020. The estimated total sales in 2020 were $27.1 billion, down from $30.8 billion in 2018.

But the estimated annual payroll increased to $3.4 billion in 2020, up from $3.2 billion in 2018.

In 2020, the estimated number of people employed in the U.S. breweries industry was 67,247, not statistica­lly different from 69,574 in 2018.

The ASM shows that estimated total wineries sales went from $20.7 billion in 2018 to $19.8 billion in 2020; the estimated number of paid employees was 49,950 in 2018 and 48,469 in 2020; and estimated annual payroll was $2.8 billion in 2018 and $2.9 billion in 2020.

Imports/exports of Beer and Wine

The country we import the most beer from is Mexico, both by value ($4.9 billion) and volume (3.5 billion liters) (Table 1), according to USA Trade Online. But Chile was the top recipient of U.S. beer exports in 2021 by value ($125 million) and volume (93 million liters) (Table 2).

Adam Grundy is a supervisor­y statistici­an in the Census Bureau’s Customer Liaison and Marketing Services Office.

Jane Callen is the senior writer/editor in the Census Bureau’s Communicat­ions Directorat­e.

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