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Issue 1, January/February 2006
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
SpotLight: Texas Exports
Taking Top Spot in Selling Overseas
Texas and California are the United
States’ export powerhouses, generating more than
a quarter of the nation’s overseas sales. In third
quarter 2005, 14.5 percent of U.S. exports originated
in Texas. Just under 13 percent originated in California.
The next largest exporting state is New York, at 5.5
percent.
California, led by
its electronic industry, had been the top exporting
state until early 2002. Since then, California’s
overseas sales have continued to rise, but Texas’
exports have surged ahead. The reason appears to involve
shifting trade patterns for computers and electronics—the
top export for both states.

Since peaking in 2000, California’s
exports of these products to its three biggest customers—Mexico,
Canada and Japan—have fallen. As a result, the
state managed only a slight increase in its share of
the United States’ foreign sales of computers
and electronics—from 9.7 percent in 1997 to 10.3
percent in 2004.
Over the same period, Texas expanded
its share of U.S. computer and electronics exports from
10.7 percent to 13.1 percent. A big reason has been
Texas’ ability to hang on to its Mexican customers.
Unlike California, Texas did not see an ebbing of sales
to Mexico from 2000 to 2004.
Mexico’s maquiladoras might
be a key.[1] Texas and California exports represented
76 percent of total U.S. exports of computers and electronics
to Mexico in the first three quarters of 2005.
Asian companies have made inroads
in supplying Mexico’s maquiladora assembly plants.
Their share of the business rose from 8.6 percent in
2000 to 24 percent in 2002 to 37 percent in the first
quarter of 2005.
Meanwhile, U.S. firms’ share
has been shrinking—90 percent in 2000, 71 percent
in 2002 and 56 percent in the first three months of
2005.
We
do not have data by product, but broad trade flows suggest
Texas has kept a larger share of the maquiladora business.
Baja California–California border maquiladoras
produce primarily electronic goods, which Asian suppliers
sell more cheaply.
Electronics is an important export
sector for Texas, but many of the maquiladoras on its
southern flank produce auto products. If suppliers moved
from the Midwest to the border in the 1990s to serve
the maquiladoras on a just-in-time basis, it will be
harder for Asian suppliers to displace Texas-based suppliers.
In addition, it is definitely much easier to get Asian
inputs into Tijuana or Mexicali than into Matamoros,
Reynosa or Juárez.
Overall, Texas depends quite a
bit on Mexico as an export market. Through the first
nine months of 2005, sales to Mexico exceeded $36.6
billion, or nearly 40 percent of the state’s export
total of $95.3 billion. Sales to Mexico are still below
the peak they reached in the vigorous expansion prior
to the 2001 recession.
Mexico led Canada, Texas’
second-largest market, by more than three to one. Since
2002, rapidly developing China has been Texas’
fastest growing market, but it still buys only a tenth
of what Mexico does. Korea, Taiwan, Singapore and Japan
follow in the rankings, showing the collective importance
of Asian markets to Texas.
—Fiona Sigalla
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Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
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