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Business Frontier

Issue 3, 2004
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
El Paso Branch

U.S.–Mexico Trade: Are We Still Connected?

Trade between the United States and Mexico slowed sharply between 2001 and 2003, primarily because of slower growth in both countries. During this period, gross domestic product (GDP) growth fell to 1.6 percent per year on average in the United States and 0.6 percent in Mexico. Consequently, U.S. exports to Mexico fell 4.4 percent on average per year for 2001–03. U.S. imports of goods and services from Mexico grew only 0.6 percent on average per year over the same period.

Currently, with both countries again growing strongly, U.S.–Mexico trade seems to be back on track, rising at an annual rate of 13.5 percent since January. This article looks at how trade between the United States and Mexico has increased synchronization of the two economies, examines both countries’ trade by industry and explores how enhanced trade between these countries affects border economic growth.

Economic Synchronization Through Trade
Inter-industry trade refers to countries exporting and importing the products of different industries based on comparative advantage provided by their national characteristics or initial endowments. This is the standard concept of trade taught in every elementary economics textbook, describing how opening trade between two countries unequivocally enhances the welfare of both.

Three important results follow from this theory of inter-industry trade. First, after trade opens, a country will export goods that are relatively intensive in abundant domestic factors. The United States will export technology because of its relative abundance of skilled labor or wheat because of its farmland. It will import goods like textiles or apparel that are intensive in scarce, low-wage labor. Second, trade benefits the abundant factors (skilled labor, farmers) and hurts the scarce factor (low-wage labor). The country as a whole gains, but there are well-defined losers. Third, export industries expand while industries competing with imports contract, perhaps causing extensive unemployment and long-term readjustment.

There is another form of trade, however, that is not based on the competition between scarce and abundant factors. Intra-industry trade occurs within industries and even between countries making the same good and using similar factors of production. [1] This trade can arise because goods are similar but not identical—Japanese car manufacturers are known for quality, U.S. automakers for innovations like the minivan and sport utility vehicle. Opening intra-industry trade can spread fixed cost across countries as one or the other develops a cost advantage. Unlike inter-industry trade, where there are well-defined and broad classes of winners and losers, intra-industry trade does not carry implications of massive readjustment across industries. Innovations can arise anywhere, and the location of fixed factors may simply be an accident of history.[2]

Although opening trade implies new linkages between countries, there is no consensus about whether increased trade leads to more or less correlation of business cycles across trading partners. However, recent empirical research suggests that if the integration of trading-partner economies is the result of growing intra-industry versus inter-industry trade, business cycles will become more positively correlated.[3] The experience of the European Union and other economically integrated regions shows that the structural-adjustment processes induced by trade liberalization are less disruptive if the adjustment follows intra- rather than inter-industry patterns.[4]

Chart 1: U.S. and Mexico get synchronizedMaquiladora-led U.S.–Mexico trade is primarily intra-industry trade. Most industries experienced large increases in intra-industry trade over the first five years of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).[5] From 1993 to 2003, U.S.–Mexico total trade increased 189 percent, from $81.4 billion to $235.5 billion. About 80 percent of U.S. trade with Mexico is intra-industry, a fact that may have played a role in the countries’ increased economic synchronization, especially after NAFTA took effect in 1994 (Chart 1). From 1980 to 1993, the correlation coefficient between the coincident indexes of economic activity in the United States and Mexico was 0.73. The same correlation coefficient increased to 0.96 between 1993 and 2004. More formal studies by Mexico’s central bank provide evidence that production linkages between Mexico and the U.S. manufacturing sectors strengthened after NAFTA’s enactment, and as a consequence, business cycles in these countries became more synchronized.[6]

What Are Mexico and the United States Trading?
Table 1 lists the 15 largest U.S. exports to Mexico plus the top 15 U.S. imports from Mexico in 2003. Eleven categories appear on both lists, indicating extensive intra-industry trade. Computer and electronic products, for example, were the top U.S. export to Mexico and also the second-largest import from Mexico. Transportation equipment was the second largest U.S. export to Mexico but also the top U.S. import from Mexico. This two-way exchange implies each country is sending the other the same product, just at different stages of production. In the computer and electronic products category, the United States may send Mexico chips and software, while Mexico sends assembled computers back to the United States—an example of U.S.–Mexico trade through the maquiladora industry.

Table 1
U.S. Trade with Mexico 2003
(Billions of U.S. Dollars)
Exports
Imports
Rank
NAICS code
Product
Amount
Rank
NAICS code
Product
Amount
1
334
Computer and electronic products
21.533
1
336
Transportation equipment
35.458
2
336
Transportation equipment
12.356
2
334
Computer and electronic products
29.557
3
325
Chemicals
9.175
3
211
Oil and gas
14.439
4
333
Machinery, except electrical
8.511
4
335
Electrical equipment, appliances, and component
10.997
5
335
Electrical equipment, appliances, and component
6.184
5
315
Apparel and accessories
7.177
6
326
Plastics and rubber products
4.826
6
333
Machinery, except electrical
5.642
7
311
Food manufacturing
4.165
7
332
Fabricated metal products, NESOI
3.71
8
332
Fabricated metal products, NESOI
4.041
8
339
Miscellaneous manufactured commodities
3.567
9
111
Agricultural products
3.586
9
111
Agricultural products
2.972
10
331
Primary metal manufacturing
2.854
10
325
Chemicals
2.37
11
313
Textiles and fabrics
2.718
11
331
Primary metal manufacturing
2.342
12
322
Paper
2.701
12
312
Beverages and tobacco products
1.747
13
324
Petroleum and coal products
2.323
13
316
Leather and allied products
1.721
14
339
Miscellaneous manufactured commodities
2.269
14
327
Nonmetallic mineral products
1.673
15
315
Apparel and accessories
1.656
15
311
Food manufacturing
1.394
    Subtotal:
88.898
    Subtotal:
124.766
    All other:
8.559
    All other:
13.306
    Total
97.457
    Total
138.072
SOURCE: U.S. International Trade Commission.

Originally, maquiladora plants were allowed to temporarily import duty-free supplies, parts, machinery and equipment necessary to produce goods and services in Mexico, as long as the output was exported back to the United States. The United States, in turn, taxed only the value-added portion of the manufactured product. The top three maquiladora sectors—transportation equipment, electronics, and textiles and apparel—together compose 75 percent of total maquiladora employment and are well represented in our list of 15 leading goods traded between the two countries.

Table 2 shows U.S. exports to Mexico for the 10 leading exporting states in 2003. Texas is the most important exporter to Mexico, with almost 43 percent of the total ($41.6 billion), followed by California at 15 percent ($14.9 billion) and Michigan with 4.1 percent ($4 billion). Texas’ leading exports are computer and electronic products, transportation equipment and chemicals. California exports computer and electronic products, machinery, and plastics and rubber products, while Michigan mainly exports transportation equipment, computer and electronic products, and chemicals.

Table 2
U.S. Exports to Mexico by Top 10 States, 2003
(Billions of U.S. dollars)
 
State
Total exports
 
All United States
97.457
 
1
Texas
41.561
 
2
California
14.872
 
3
Michigan
4.006
 
4
Arizona
3.229
 
5
Illinois
2.153
 
6
Indiana
2.105
 
7
Ohio
2.102
 
8
Florida
1.814
 
9
Louisiana
1.776
 
10
New York
1.705
 
SOURCE: World Institute for Strategic Economic Research.

Trade at the Border
In 2003, trade through land ports along the U.S.–Mexico border represented about 83 percent of the trade between the countries. Together, the top 10 ports of entry account for 98 percent of trade passing through the border (Table 3). Laredo was by far the leader with a 40.5 percent share, or $79 billion in cargoes. Second-place El Paso had about half the exports of Laredo, at $40 billion, or 20.2 percent. With $152 billion in land trade with Mexico, Texas surpassed other states by far: California ($30 billion), Arizona ($12 billion) and New Mexico ($1.1 billion). Growth in U.S.–Mexico trade in the 1990s, as well as the increased economic interdependence along the border, is easily explained by the stellar performance of the maquiladora industry during the decade. For instance, Mexico’s total maquiladora trade reached $136 billion in 2003, or about 41 percent of the country’s total trade. This figure was up fivefold from 1990, when it was only $24 billion.

Table 3
U.S. U.S.–Mexico Trade by Top 10 Land Ports, 2003
(Billions of U.S. dollars)
 
City
Total trade
1
Laredo, TX
78.812
 
2
El Paso, TX
39.334
 
3
Otay Mesa–San Ysidro, CA
19.747
 
4
Hidalgo, TX
14.432
 
5
Nogales, AZ
10.356
 
6
Brownsville–Cameron, TX
10.147
 
7
Calexico, CA
8.898
 
8
Eagle Pass, TX
5.739
 
9
Del Rio, TX
2.772
 
10
Santa Teresa, NM
1.089
 
  Total for 10 ports of entry
191.326
 
SOURCE: World Institute for Strategic Economic Research.

The positive impact of maquiladora growth for the U.S. side of the border has two main sources: (1) the spillovers from maquiladora-associated income growth in neighboring Mexican cities, such as retail sales, and (2) the shift of many U.S. maquiladora suppliers to border cities from their traditional base in the Midwest.[7] In recent years, we have seen how rising real wages in Mexico and foreign competition have reduced the prospects for maquiladora growth in some sectors, and now we are seeing foreign competition make inroads into the maquiladora supply chain. This raises the possibility of slowing, or even reversing, the growth of U.S. border-city suppliers to the maquiladora industry.

Chart 2: U.S. suppliers losing market share in MexicoThroughout the 1990s, the vast majority of imported inputs to the maquiladora industry came from the United States. In 2000, 90 percent of maquiladora inputs were from the United States and 9 percent were from Asia, with China contributing only 1 percent (Chart 2). By 2003, 69 percent came from the United States and 28 percent from Asia, including 8 percent from China. The United States remains the majority supplier, but this rapidly moving trend continued to run in favor of Asia into 2004.

It may be that U.S.-based suppliers are simply being replaced by global competitors, mainly from Asia. Alternatively, perhaps U.S.-based suppliers are having their inputs partially or completely produced in Asia to take advantage of cheaper labor, then sent to Mexico for final assembly in the maquiladoras. Either way, maquiladora imports from the United States have fallen, even though Mexico’s maquiladora exports remain almost completely (98 percent) destined for U.S. consumption.

Unfortunately, data are not available on exactly which inputs are being displaced, making it difficult to assess the impact on Texas border communities. Did production move to the border in the 1990s because the inputs being produced were time-sensitive, making it hard for Asian firms to compete? Or are Texas suppliers, like more distant suppliers in the Midwest, seeing a rapid production shift to Asia?

Recent research suggests it is still too early to write off the established supplier networks on the border, in spite of rising wages in Mexico. Competitive advantages continue in sectors that place a premium on proximity to both markets and supplier networks.[8] More specifically, the established competitive supplier networks of the border maquiladoras, and the developed border infrastructure that links the maquiladoras to the large U.S. market, can offset the initial disadvantages of higher labor costs and a leveling of tariff policies. With a continued strong presence of cross-border interdependence, the border region can remain the pioneer and leader with respect to manufacturing processes.

Summary
U.S.–Mexico trade is growing again at rates experienced before the recent economic slowdown. In addition, the top products traded by these countries have not changed, implying that trade expansion may have a less disruptive effect in both countries as a result of the intra-industry nature of their trade relationship. This relationship may also be a key factor in the economic synchronization of the U.S. and Mexican business cycles. Recent data suggest that U.S. suppliers to the Mexican maquiladora industry are rapidly being replaced by global competitors, mainly from Asia. Data are not available to specifically assess this trend’s impact on Texas suppliers, but research suggests that proximity and infrastructure remain significant assets for maquiladora suppliers located in Texas border cities.

Jesus Cañas
  Roberto Coronado

About the Authors

Cañas and Coronado are assistant economists at the El Paso Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

Notes

  1. The seminal work on this subject is Intra-Industry Trade: The Theory and Measurement of International Trade in Differentiated Products, by H. G. Grubel and P. J. Lloyd, New York: John Wiley, 1975.

  2. For an introduction to the subject, see “The Nature and Significance of Intra-Industry Trade,” [PDF] by Roy J. Ruffin, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic and Financial Review, Fourth Quarter 1999, pp. 2–9.

  3. “The Endogeneity of the Optimum Currency Area Criteria,” by Jeffrey Frankel and Andrew Rose, Economic Journal, vol. 108, July 1998, pp. 1009–25.

  4. “Intra-Industry Trade: Current Perspectives and Unresolved Issues,” by David Greenaway and Chris Milner, Weltwirtschaftliches Archiv, vol. 123, no. 1, 1987, pp. 39–57.

  5. “Intra-Industry Trade Between the United Sates and Mexico: 1993–1998,” by Don P. Clark, Thomas M. Fullerton Jr. and Duane Burdorf, Estudios Económicos, El Colegio de México, vol. 16, no. 2, 2001, pp. 167–83.

  6. See “Bilateral Trade and Business Cycle Synchronization: Evidence from Mexico and United States Manufacturing Industries,” by Daniel Chiquiar and Manuel Ramos-Francia, Working Paper no. 2004-05, Dirección General de Investigación Económica, Banco de México, October 2004. Also see “La Relación de Largo Plazo del PIB Mexicano y de sus Componentes con la Actividad Económica en los Estados Unidos y con el Tipo de Cambio Real,” by Daniel G. Garcés Díaz, Documento de Investigación no. 2003-4, Dirección General de Investigación Económica, Banco de México, marzo de 2003.

  7. See “El empleo en la frontera de Texas y el crecimiento de las maquiladoras,” by Jesus Cañas, Roberto Coronado and Robert W. Gilmer, Acontecimientos Recientes sobre Desarrollo Económico Fronterizo, Colegio de la Frontera Norte, forthcoming.

  8. See “Maquila Sunrise or Sunset? Evolutions of Regional Production Advantages,” by Stephan Weiler and Becky Zerlentes, Social Science Journal, vol. 40, no. 2, 2003, pp. 283–97.

About Business Frontier

Business Frontier is published by the El Paso Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System.

Subscriptions are available free of charge. Please direct requests for subscriptions, back issues and address changes to the Public Affairs Department, El Paso Branch, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, 301 E. Main St., El Paso, TX 79901-1326; call 915-521-5235 or 915-521-5233; fax 915-521-5228; or subscribe via the Internet at www.dallasfed.org.

Articles may be reprinted on the condition that the source is credited and a copy of the publication containing the reprinted material is provided to the Research Department, El Paso Branch, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

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