Below are highlights from the recently released trade data from the US Census Bureau and US Bureau of Economic Analysis. To view additional data and analysis related to the California economy visit our website at www.centerforjobs.org/ca.
California origin exports were up sharply by 14.9% compared to March 2021, and 8.5% compared to the pre-pandemic level in March 2019. While significant in nominal terms, adjusting for inflation instead shows that the state’s exporters are still short of recovery as renewed lockdowns in China and increasing global disruptions from Russia’s war on Ukraine affect the state’s markets.
Trade activity, however, continued to be dominated by imports which were higher than March 2019 by more than a third in nominal terms and by nearly a fifth in real terms. Imports continued to be driven both by the need to replenish gaps in the supply chains as well as inventory build ups in anticipation of West Coast labor actions this year.
The rise in imports is also reflected in the recent GDP results for the first quarter of the year. Personal consumption (increase almost all due to services rather than goods) and business investment (almost all due to equipment and intellectual property rather than buildings) both showed substantial growth in the quarter, in part due the lasting effect of above-average savings during the pandemic due to lower overall consumption especially services and the lingering effect of the various federal pandemic assistance payments. The recorded overall drop in the quarter instead came from a draw down of inventories rather than expanded production to meet demand, a dip in exports as global trade disruption began to grow, and a surge in imports rather than domestic production.
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