Trade imbalance data is better than it looks

Published: Dec. 14, 2017, 12:45 a.m.

b'Trade deficits are considered bad news for economies, and for an economy the size of the United States, a deficit of $745 billion in 2015, the largest seen in decades, would be cause for alarm.\\n\\nBut the true picture is more complex.\\n\\nLooking beyond traditional statistics shows how burgeoning global value chains are now driving changes in the manufacturing of, trade in, and value of goods. \\n\\nMultinational corporations that have successfully leveraged global value chains have pivoted away from manufacturing and now concentrate more fully on marketing, design, and innovation.\\n\\nApple, Nike, Reebok, the Limited, and the Gap are major players in consumer electronics, athletic footwear, and fashion-oriented apparel, but own not a single production facility in the United States. With the exception of Apple, none of them owns production facilities anywhere in the world. \\n\\nOfficial statistics have yet to catch up with new trade realities emerging from global value chains. Although the gross profit margins of the Apple iPhone exceed 60 percent and that of Nike products is more than 45 percent, this value is not shown in US export metrics.\\n\\nRead the transcript\\nhttp://bit.ly/2z9Kn1E\\n\\nRead the working paper\\nhttps://www.adb.org/publications/global-value-chains-and-missing-exports-united-states\\n\\nAbout the author\\nYuqing Xing is a professor of economics and the director of Asian economic policy at the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo.\\n\\nKnow more about ADBI\\u2019s work on international trade\\nhttp://bit.ly/2AC03x0'