U.S Technology Exports Up by $21 Billion in 2007

August 2007

Washington, DC – U.S. high-tech goods exports increased by 10 percent from $199 billion to $220 billion, while imports rose by 9 percent from $295 billion to $322 billion between 2005 and 2006, according to AeA's first edition of Trade in the Cyberstates 2007, a study released today that looks at high-tech trade flows at the national level and for all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico. This report is a partner publication to AeA’s annual flagship publication, Cyberstates, which looks at high-tech employment, wages, and other factors at the national and stateby- state level.

Trade in the Cyberstates 2007 shows that 2006 was the fourth consecutive year of growing high-tech exports, with increases in all eight industry sectors. The leading growth sectors were industrial electronics (+16%) and communications equipment +13%). High tech was the nation’s largest export industry in 2006, comprising 21 percent of total U.S. goods exports.

In 2006, the United States had an overall trade deficit in high-tech goods of $102 billion. Not surprisingly, the largest deficit with any single country was with China, at $88 billion in 2006. We are not able to discern from the data what percentage of tech imports from China are intra-company transfers from U.S. production facilities abroad that use American technology and now-how and along with inputs from other countries to produce goods shipped back to the United States. The largest high-tech trade surplus for the United States, also not surprising, was with Canada at $18 billion, followed by the European Union at $13 billion in 2006.

“Trade is increasingly important for U.S. high-technology companies,” said Matthew Kazmierczak, Vice President, Research and Industry Analysis, AeA. “The world is both their marketplace and their supply chain. This year, for the first time, we have  published the tech trade data in this separate report in order to offer a more detailed and comprehensive picture of trade flows. This has allowed us to illustrate how important trade is both at the national and state levels. Trade keeps American business competitive, it serves customers around the world, and it supports American jobs – an often overlooked fact. High-tech exports support 684,000 domestic jobs, according to an estimate derived from the U.S. Department of the Census."

High-tech was the second largest industry import, just behind energy products. The largest high tech-import sectors in 2006 were computers and peripheral equipment ($108.1 billion), communications equipment ($68.9 billion), and consumer electronics ($47.9 billion).

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