East Bay Times

In trade swing, U.S. is buying more from Mexico than China

Country south of the border seizes on opportunit­ies

- By Ana Swanson and Simon Romero

>> In the depths of the pandemic, as global supply chains buckled and the cost of shipping a container to China soared nearly twentyfold, Marco Villarreal spied an opportunit­y.

In 2021, Villarreal resigned as Caterpilla­r's director general in Mexico and began nurturing ties with companies looking to shift manufactur­ing from China to Mexico. He found a client in Hisun, a Chinese producer of all-terrain vehicles, which hired Villarreal to establish a $152 million manufactur­ing site in Saltillo, an industrial hub in northern Mexico.

Villarreal said foreign companies, particular­ly those seeking to sell within North America, saw Mexico as a viable alternativ­e to China for several reasons, including the simmering trade tensions between the United States and China.

“The stars are aligning for Mexico,” he said.

New data released Wednesday showed that Mexico outpaced China to become the United States' top source of official imports for the first time in 20 years — a significan­t shift that highlights how increased tensions between Washington and Beijing are altering trade flows.

The United States' trade deficit with China narrowed significan­tly last year, with imports from the country dropping 20% to $427.2 billion, the data shows. American consumers and businesses turned to Mexico, Europe, South Korea, India, Canada and Vietnam for auto parts, shoes, toys and raw materials.

Mexican exports to the United States were roughly the same as last year, at $475.6 billion.

The United States' total trade deficit in goods and services, which consists of exports minus imports, narrowed 18.7%. Overall U.S. exports to the world increased slightly in 2023 from the previous year, despite a strong dollar and a soft global economy.

U.S. imports fell annually as Americans bought less crude oil and chemicals and fewer consumer goods, including cellphones, clothes, camping gear, toys and furniture.

The recent weakness in imports, and drop-off in trade with China, has partially been a reflection of the pandemic. American consumers stuck at home during the pandemic snapped up Chinese-made laptops, toys, COVID-19 tests, athleisure, furniture and home exercise equipment.

Even as concerns about the coronaviru­s faded in 2022, the United States continued to import a lot of Chinese products, as bottleneck­s at congested U.S. ports finally cleared and businesses restocked their warehouses.

“The world couldn't get access to enough Chinese goods in `21, and it gorged on Chinese goods in `22,” said Brad Setser, an economist and senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. “Everything has been normalizin­g since then.”

But beyond the unusual swings in annual patterns in the last few years, trade data is beginning to provide compelling evidence that years of heightened tensions have significan­tly chipped away at the United States' trading relationsh­ip with China.

In 2023, U.S. quarterly imports from China were at roughly the same level as they were 10 years ago, despite a decade of growth in the U.S. economy and rising U.S. imports from elsewhere in the world.

“We are decoupling, and that's weighing heavily on trade flows,” Mark Zandi, the chief economist of Moody's Analytics, said of the United States and China.

Economists say the relative decrease in trade with China is clearly linked to the tariffs imposed by the Trump administra­tion and then maintained by the Biden administra­tion.

Research by Caroline Freund, the dean of the University of California, San Diego's School of Global Policy and Strategy, showed that trade with China fell for products that have high tariffs, such as screwdrive­rs and smoke detectors, while trade in products that do not have tariffs, such as hair dryers and microwave ovens, continued to grow.

Ralph Ossa, the chief economist for the World Trade Organizati­on, said trade between the United States and China had not collapsed, but that it had been growing about 30% more slowly than trade between those countries and the rest of the world.

There were two episodes in recent history where U.S. trade with China slowed notably, he said. The first was when trade tensions between the countries escalated in 2018. The second was when Russia invaded Ukraine, prompting the United States and its allies to impose strict sanctions and further reshufflin­g global trade relationsh­ips.

“There was a period where geopolitic­s didn't really matter for trade much, but as uncertaint­y increases in the world, we do see that trade becomes more sensitive to these positions,” said Stela Rubinova, a research economist at the World Trade Organizati­on.

Some economists caution that the U.S. reduction in trade with China might not be as sharp as bilateral data shows. That is because like Hisun, the Chinese vehicle producer, some multinatio­nals have shifted portions of their manufactur­ing out of China and into other countries but continued sourcing some raw materials and parts from China.

In other cases, companies may simply be routing goods that are actually made in China through other countries to avoid U.S. tariffs.

U.S. trade statistics do not record such products as coming from China, even though a significan­t portion of their value would have been created there.

Freund, who wrote a recent paper on the subject, said the two countries' trade relationsh­ip was “definitely being attenuated, but not as much as the official statistics suggest.”

Still, geopolitic­al risks are clearly pushing companies to look to other markets, particular­ly those with low costs and stable trading relationsh­ips with the United States, such as Mexico.

Jesús Carmona, the president for Mexico and Central America at Schneider Electric, the French electrical equipment giant, said the Biden administra­tion's 2022 climate law and geopolitic­al tensions stemming from the war in Ukraine were both factors pushing companies toward Mexico.

When China appeared to align with Russia in the conflict, “it triggered all sorts of alarms,” Carmona said. “People realized we cannot have such dependenci­es on China, which we built up over the last 40 years as we were making China the factory of the world.”

Schneider, which already had a substantia­l presence in Mexico with nine factories and nearly 12,000 employees, decided in 2021 that it needed to grow further in the country. Now, after opening new manufactur­ing sites and expanding existing plants, the company has about 16,000 employees in Mexico, with plans for that number to soon reach about 20,000.

Schneider sends about 75% to 80% of its production in Mexico to the United States, including an array of products such as circuit breakers and panels used to distribute and regulate electrical power.

While foreign direct investment in developing countries fell 9% in 2023, the flow of such investment to Mexico surged 21% last year, according to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t.

Another economy caught in the shifting tides between the United States and China has been South Korea. Like Mexico, South Korea is subject to lower tariffs because it has a free trade deal with the United States. In December, U.S. imports from South Korea

were the highest on record.

South Korean firms have also particular­ly benefited from President Joe Biden's new climate legislatio­n. The U.S. government is offering tax credits for consumers who buy electric vehicles, but it has set certain limits on sourcing parts of those cars from China.

As major manufactur­ers of electric vehicle batteries and components, South Korean firms have seized the opportunit­y to participat­e in newly expanding U.S. vehicle supply chains. One Korean battery manufactur­er, SK On, has invested $2.6 billion in a factory in Georgia and is building new facilities in Georgia, Tennessee and Kentucky in partnershi­p with Hyundai and Ford.

Min Sung, the chief commercial officer of SK On, said China was getting more restrictiv­e for Korean businesses. Meanwhile, the U.S. constraint­s on China benefiting from electric vehicle tax credits had given Korean businesses “more space to play.”

“In order for business to survive, you always find the market that's got more potential,” Sung said.

As major Korean companies such as SK, LG, Samsung and Hyundai build new facilities to make products in the United States, that also appears to be increasing U.S. trade with South Korea since companies are importing some materials, machinery and parts from their home countries to supply the new facilities.

In December, Korean exports to the United States surpassed Korean exports to China for the first time in 20 years, driven by shipments of vehicles, electric batteries and other parts.

Sung agreed that increasing American skepticism of China was pushing the United States and South Korea closer together.

“It's never been stronger than the last couple of years between two allies,” he said.

 ?? PHOTOS BY BRYAN DENTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A worker pours colored resin into a centrifuge in Tizayuca, Mexico, in 2022. The United States bought more goods from Mexico than China in 2023for the first time in 20years, evidence of how much global trade patterns have shifted.
PHOTOS BY BRYAN DENTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES A worker pours colored resin into a centrifuge in Tizayuca, Mexico, in 2022. The United States bought more goods from Mexico than China in 2023for the first time in 20years, evidence of how much global trade patterns have shifted.
 ?? ?? Employees at Preslow, a fourth-generation apparel business in Tizayuca, work on clothing patterns late last year.
Employees at Preslow, a fourth-generation apparel business in Tizayuca, work on clothing patterns late last year.
 ?? DAVID WALTER BANKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Workers arrive at the SK Battery America plant in Commerce, Ga. South Korean battery manufactur­er SK On is building new facilities in Georgia, Tennessee and Kentucky in partnershi­p with Hyundai and Ford.
DAVID WALTER BANKS — THE NEW YORK TIMES Workers arrive at the SK Battery America plant in Commerce, Ga. South Korean battery manufactur­er SK On is building new facilities in Georgia, Tennessee and Kentucky in partnershi­p with Hyundai and Ford.

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