Archive for May, 2016

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USA Continues to Attract Business Investment: Congratulations to SATA USA and Brownsville, TX

May 4, 2016

By Arun Kumar, Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Global Markets and Director General of the US and Foreign Commercial Service

This is a great time to invest in American manufacturing. Yesterday, AT Kearney announced that the United States ranked first for the fourth year running in its annual Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) Confidence Index. Last week, President Barack Obama and Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker led the largest ever U.S. delegation to Hannover Messe, the world’s leading industrial manufacturing trade fair. As of April 1, the manufacturing sector has added 838,000 jobs during the past 73 months. And today, SATA USA has announced that it will create more jobs in Brownsville, Texas to add to that number.

SATA USA

Assistant Secretary Kumar congratulates Brownsville Mayor Tony Martinez and SATA USA Co-Owners

I was thrilled to personally congratulate Brownsville and thank SATA USA’s president, Pietro Cinotto, when he announced that the company would invest $114 million in a machining operation that will create 300 jobs over a 10-year period. This investment demonstrates the continued competitiveness of American manufacturing, the role of foreign direct investment (FDI) in job creation, and the benefits of our commercial relationship with Mexico.

SATA Group is a family-owned business headquartered in Valperga, Italy. Founded more than a century ago, this will be its first manufacturing facility in North America. Roughly 12 million jobs across the country are attributable to FDI, and 124,700 U.S. workers are directly employed by the U.S. affiliates of Italian-owned firms. In 2013, European companies like SATA exported $204 billion worth of goods from the United States.

Supplying both the automotive industry and the heavy equipment manufacturing sector, SATA USA expects to export many of its products, adding to the $1.5 billion worth of goods that cross our border with Mexico each day. In August 2015, Secretary Pritzker was joined by her Mexican counterparts to inaugurate the West Rail Bypass International Bridge in Brownsville – the first new international rail crossing between the U.S. and Mexico in 105 years – which is making it easier for companies based in the United States to reach customers in Mexico.

We first learned about SATA’s interest in the United States a couple of years ago, when our SelectUSA team was invited to a meeting in Congressman Filemon Vela’s office with Brownsville Mayor Tony Martinez and Jason Hilts, head of the Brownsville Economic Development Council (BEDC). They wanted to brief SelectUSA on a potential investment project, codenamed “Project Sizzle,” and to request our assistance.

SelectUSA is the federal government program to promote and facilitate job-creating FDI into the United States. Working with colleagues throughout the U.S. and Foreign Commercial Service, SelectUSA assists U.S. economic development organizations like BEDC and foreign companies like SATA Group that are considering expanding or establishing operations in the United States.

Working closely with Brownsville and the U.S. Commercial Service in Italy, our team coordinated advocacy efforts by SelectUSA Executive Director Vinai Thummalapally, U.S. Ambassador to Italy John Phillips, and Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker. Through this process, we have had the pleasure of witnessing how hard the BEDC team worked to make the case for Brownsville, bringing together stakeholders from the local community, the university and community college systems, and the State of Texas. SATA considered Brownsville’s connectivity, access to raw materials, growing supplier base, and availability of labor when deciding whether to locate in the United States.

The new facility will serve as an anchor for the planned North Brownsville Heavy Manufacturing Campus, which is an ambitious 350-acre development that will integrate private enterprise, the public sector, the university system, and community college/technical training facilities.

Congratulations and best wishes to the teams in Brownsville and Valperga. We look forward to your success, and to seeing BEDC at the 2016 SelectUSA Investment Summit in June!

Resources: Brownsville Economic Development Council’s press release is available on their website. An article that details SelectUSA’s involvement is available at the Rio Grande Guardian. To learn how SelectUSA can help your community to attract international investment or assist your company to establish or expand in the United States, visit www.SelectUSA.gov.

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Getting to Know the Benefits of TPP Country by Country

May 3, 2016

Eric Holloway is the Deputy Director in the Office of East Asia and Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation

U.S companies have a brand new resource available to them with the recently released Trans-Pacific Partnership Opportunities by Market report from the International Trade Administration (ITA). Educating U.S businesses and workers on the benefits of TPP is an important role for ITA. The ITA Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) series of factsheets highlight opportunities for businesses by state, sector and now for each of the TPP markets. With this added report businesses can reference each of the 11 TPP partner markets’ top export sectors, how TPP will make it easier to do business in each of the TPP partner markets, or explore how existing tariffs will be eliminated once TPP is enacted.Trans-Pacific Partnership logo

TPP will offer a more balanced trade environment for U.S. businesses of all sizes. This agreement encompasses a diverse range of 11 countries, opening the door for new trade opportunities and improving on existing trade relationships. Goods exports to TPP countries supported 3.1 million U.S. jobs in 2014. In that same year the TPP countries for which the United States does not have an existing trade agreement (Brunei, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Vietnam) collectively accounted for $726.5 billion in exports.

TPP, once enacted, will ensure that American businesses can conduct international trade in a more fair and equitable manner. TPP will eliminate more than 18,000 tariffs levied on American-made goods and services. This tax relief alone will have a significant impact. Vietnam currently taxes up to 35 percent on U.S. goods in the information and communication technologies sector and 97 percent if U.S. exports will be duty free immediately once the agreement is implemented. Another example is the $8.3 billion in health products exported to Japan that face tariffs of up to 5.6 percent, but under TPP 100 percent of U.S. exports of health products will be duty-free on day one.

TPP will enhance intellectual property rights protection and introduce the most comprehensive environmental and labor regulations ever negotiated in a trade agreement. Implementing TPP will increase our competitiveness and market access in the TPP countries for Made-in-America goods and services, helping the 11 million U.S. jobs presently supported by U.S. exports to the world.

ITA works diligently with U.S. businesses of all sizes to create or enhance their global competitiveness – whether it’s developing export promotion strategies, ensuring compliance with trade agreements, or advocating for expansion of U.S. businesses, partners and stakeholders in international markets. Information is vital to making sound business decisions, and the TPP Opportunities by Market report is one more tool the ITA rolls out to their clients to help them make decisions to lead in the business world.

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World Trade Month: The Importance of Global Trade  

May 2, 2016

Stefan M. Selig is the U.S. Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade.

World Trade Month logo

Every year, World Trade Month—designated for the month of May—gives us the opportunity to acknowledge the importance of global trade, and look back at the economic advancements we have made as a result. This World Trade Month, we can look back and appreciate the success we have accomplished.

In 2015, our exports totaled $2.23 trillion, we increased our exports to 58 international markets, and we achieved record exports with 20 global partners. Our export success was one aspect of a strong year for the U.S. economy where our auto industry experienced its best year ever and our manufacturing sector reached record highs for output. Exports also contributed to our economy, supporting 11.5 million U.S. jobs and accounting for nearly 13 percent of U.S. GDP. In addition, last year, U.S. services exports tallied another strong year. In fact, business services; telecommunications, computer and information services; and travel all reached export increases of more than $1 billion.

Because we have an economic landscape where trade and investment drive growth, the mission of the International Trade Administration (ITA) is even more important than it has been before. With more than 95 percent of the world’s customers living outside of our borders, trade and investment are a platform for our country to deliver our goods and services to global consumers. A robust export environment also attracts and encourages foreign companies to invest in the most innovative, productive workforce in the world: the United States of America.

These are just some of the reasons why we worked to complete the negotiation for the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and are working on finalizing the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (T-TIP) negotiations. A world with both TPP and T-TIP will create a free-trade zone representing more than 60 percent of global GDP, while leveling the playing field for U.S. firms.

Throughout World Trade Month, events across the country are being held to recognize the importance of exporting to jobs and our economy. On May 16th, several U.S. companies will be in Washington, DC to receive the President’s “E” Award in recognition of their contribution to increasing American exports through selling high-quality products and services. During World Trade Week (May 16-20), ITA will lead two missions: a renewable energy trade mission to Mexico and a business development mission to the South Pacific. And, on May 25th, the Department of Commerce will partner with the Global Innovation Forum—a project of the National Foreign Trade Council—for an educational program at Microsoft Ventures in Seattle as a part of our Startup Global program, an initiative designed to help more startup firms think on a global scale from the earliest stages of growth.

Many other events will be held as a part of World Trade Month. I encourage you to follow ITA on Twitter @TradeGov where many of these events will be highlighted. Additionally, as a part of World Trade Month, we will launch our new Instagram account @IntlTrade at the beginning of this month.

ITA is charged with helping U.S. businesses and workers succeed in the global marketplace. Our U.S.-based export assistance centers in more than 100 cities, and our foreign commercial service offices in more than 75 markets around the world, help U.S. businesses tap into global markets in ways they may not have been able to otherwise.

Our client services are precisely why Kentucky-based Zoeller company, the oldest professional pump manufacturer in North America, found a distributor that helped them deliver their systems across sub-Saharan Africa; why Zee Manufacturing out of Des Moines Iowa, was able to ship its automotive accessory products into the Saudi Arabian market; and, why Stress Indicators of Maryland is shipping their visual-indicating SmartBolts to more than 20 countries all over the world, while seeing their revenue growth rate double since 2010.

Thanks to all of the U.S. exporters who continue to advance our competitiveness within the global marketplace. We honor you during this year’s World Trade Month for your relentless commitment and effort.