How Minnesota fits into the bigger global trade picture

As the federal leadership continues to vacillate on a new tariff regime consumers employees and businesses in Minnesota are left wondering how worried or how hopeful they should be about Minnesota commerce For clues on how tariffs and arrangement deals might end up affecting the state we can look at how Minnesota has already positioned itself in the global financial sector To be clear Minnesota s governing body and state agencies can t set international exchange approach But Gabrielle Gerbaud who directs the Minnesota Contract Office reported in an interview that state initiatives can influence commerce relationships and send a message to overseas partners No matter what is happening at the federal level we are open for business Gerbaud commented function use strict window addEventListener message function a if void a content datawrapper-height var e document querySelectorAll iframe for var t in a material datawrapper-height for var r i r e i i if r contentWindow a source var d a facts datawrapper-height t px r style height d How Minnesota trades with the worldIn Minnesota exported billion worth of goods to countries everything from aerospace products to vehicles to pharmaceuticals The value of those exports represented of the state s gross domestic product GDP the total value of goods and services produced by the state Minnesota s businesses take on much of the heavy lifting in terms of how Minnesota is positioned in the global business sector Export-oriented businesses decide when and where to expand operations overseas what to sell in foreign markets and how to price their products so that they are competitive abroad while remaining profitable for the company in Minnesota Import-driven companies have a great number of of the same considerations such as deciding where to source their inputs from to best address a changing regulatory landscape all while maintaining quality control over the final product assembled in Minnesota The Minnesota Transaction Office can encourage international commerce such as by offering modest loans to small- and medium-sized businesses to attend pact conferences or inviting them on business missions headed by Gov Tim Walz which can allow these smaller enterprises to form lasting relationships with overseas partners and better understand how business works in expected overseas markets Deciding where these business missions go as well as providing expertise for businesses seeking to manage foreign markets and encouraging non-American companies to invest in Minnesota is about as far as the state agency goes Gerbaud announced The state s business society can exert pressure on the state s congressional delegation over federal contract plan she added Minnesota s market and exchange by the numbersBy the numbers it appears that companies individual decision-making processes have been on the whole a boon for the state In current years Minnesota businesses have remained competitive on the world stage with a or billion increase in the state s export value between and according to the Office of the United States Deal Representative function use strict window addEventListener message function a if void a details datawrapper-height var e document querySelectorAll iframe for var t in a content datawrapper-height for var r i r e i i if r contentWindow a source var d a material datawrapper-height t px r style height d There are at present more than exporters in Minnesota responsible for supporting roughly jobs according to Gerbaud Eighty-six percent of those exporters were small- or medium-sized businesses with employees or fewer the U S exchange office notes With a nominal GDP of over billion in according to the U S Department of Commerce s Bureau of Economic Analysis Minnesota s economic output is greater than the Philippines but slightly less than Norway based on International Monetary Fund IMF estimates of those countries economies And there is evidence that this economic output would not be feasible without the state s exporters with the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce noting that the value of exports accounted for of the state s GDP in In other words Minnesota has much to offer the world in terms of goods and services particularly in industries where it has become a pioneer This includes the physiological devices and advanced optics industries companies like Medtronic and Boston Scientific with Minnesota exporting billion worth of goods in those sectors last year The state s top exporting sector is agriculture which accounted for over billion in making Minnesota the fourth largest agricultural exporting state in the country that year according to the U S Department of Agriculture However because various agricultural products are shipped to other states to be processed or consolidated before being shipped overseas they are not consistently counted in the Minnesota Arrangement Office s numbers as being Minnesota exports Minnesotans contract with almost every country in the world from our top three partners of Canada Mexico and China which together consume over half of the value of Minnesota s exports all the way to the world s newest state of South Sudan which imported worth of Minnesota goods last year function use strict window addEventListener message function a if void a material datawrapper-height var e document querySelectorAll iframe for var t in a content datawrapper-height for var r i r e i i if r contentWindow a source var d a information datawrapper-height t px r style height d Minnesota imports plentyHowever having a bustling and diverse financial system does not mean that we will have everything we need and want While Minnesota may be a leader in therapeutic device innovation those items do not make for ideal stocking stuffers or birthday gifts That may explain why one of our biggest categories of imports is toys games and sports equipment Minnesota as a whole purchased over billion worth of these items last year with billion worth coming from China alone Overall more than billion of imports flowed into Minnesota in with fuel and oil physiological and optical products machinery and electrical equipment accounting for over half of that topline number function use strict window addEventListener message function a if void a evidence datawrapper-height var e document querySelectorAll iframe for var t in a content datawrapper-height for var r i r e i i if r contentWindow a source var d a information datawrapper-height t px r style height d Addressing the U S s exchange deficit the idea that we import more than we export has become a central tenet of the Trump administration s transaction plan For Minnesota Gerbaud commented it makes sense that there s an imbalance Unless you produce of everything that is needed by your consumers in your own country you re perpetually going to need to import things she declared And certain things are not worth making here for example textiles So there are certain products that are reliably going to be cheaper for everybody if we import them While cautioning against overgeneralizations that beatify bargain surpluses and demonize deficits Gerbaud does accept that there are certain classes of goods that are best manufactured in the country such as critical pharmaceuticals or health equipment She noted that early during the COVID- pandemic there were shortages various perceived specific real of things like masks that could have been alleviated if there was more in-country production of these items function use strict window addEventListener message function a if void a material datawrapper-height var e document querySelectorAll iframe for var t in a input datawrapper-height for var r i r e i i if r contentWindow a source var d a evidence datawrapper-height t px r style height d Minnesota business trendsBroadly speaking there is not much movement year-to-year in terms of Minnesota s top or so trading partners Canada Mexico and China inevitably make the podium They are then followed by a fairly consistent smattering of European and Asian countries A few are there due to history and economic heft such as Japan Others because they remain a gateway to even larger markets such as Belgium whose port city of Antwerp is considered a primary entry point into the European Union And one in particular the United Kingdom was consistently in our top export and import markets due in part to the special relationship between the governments in Washington and London However this last year the U K fell to th on Minnesota s list of export markets potentially due to knock-on effects of Brexit Gerbaud of the MinnesotaTrade Office reasoned Among our bulk major trading partners there has been a few jostling between Mexico and China for the position of our second largest trading partner with Mexico gaining an advantage after President Trump enacted tariffs on China in his first term and President Biden held largely the same subject But Minnesota s largest trading partner whether measured by import or export value is consistently Canada For that reason Gerbaud is less concerned with the day-to-day oscillations in tariff guidelines than she is with the outcome of a process still over a year away On July the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement USMCA Trump s successor treaty to the Clinton-era North American Free Exchange Agreement NAFTA must be jointly reviewed by Canada Mexico and the U S Despite being a -year agreement this six-year review has the foreseen to either allow the agreement to continue until or dissolve it or lead to new negotiations Another more imminent point of concern for North American business is the federal voting that Canada will hold next Monday Depending on which party takes or maintains power the new regime could take a confrontational elbows out approach to Trump or opt instead to forego aggressive posturing and negotiate behind the scenes like Mexico s President Claudia Scheinbaum is likely doing Those decisions Gerbaud explained will effect in two different stories for Minnesota s businesses and consumers with the foreseen for extensive downstream effects As with so much else in an increasingly turbulent economic ecosystem there is little we can do but wait and see The post How Minnesota fits into the bigger global bargain picture appeared first on MinnPost