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February 14th, 2007
Dallas has become one of the United States fastest-growing Customs districts.
Imports and exports through the Dallas-Fort Worth Customs District jumped 17.5 percent to total nearly $58.3 billion in 2006, according to WorldCity analysis of statistics released by the U.S. Census Department.
Overall U.S. trade growth rose 12 percent, and only three of the country’s Top 20 Customs districts outpaced Dallas. Houston-Galveston’s trade rose 18.9 percent, Seattle’s spiked more than 19.2 percent and Philadelphia saw its trade climb 19.3 percent.
Dallas-Fort Worth is the United States 15th most important Customs district, a distinction it earned in 2005 and retained in 2006.
| 2006 | 2005 | Total Trade | 2006 | 2005 | Dollar Change | Percent change |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| All Districts | $2,892,262,227,012 | $2,579,432,153,064 | $312,830,073,948 | 12.13% | ||
| 1 | 1 | Los Angeles, California | $329,422,995,915 | $293,946,624,166 | $35,476,371,749 | 12.07% |
| 2 | 2 | New York City, New York | $295,007,419,490 | $267,585,279,284 | $27,422,140,206 | 10.25% |
| 3 | 3 | Detroit, Michigan | $238,504,923,059 | $229,933,862,350 | $8,571,060,709 | 3.73% |
| 4 | 5 | Houston, Texas | $162,184,758,421 | $136,451,170,833 | $25,733,587,588 | 18.86% |
| 5 | 4 | Laredo, Texas | $157,451,698,203 | $139,277,623,715 | $18,174,074,488 | 13.05% |
| 6 | 6 | New Orleans, Louisiana | $153,034,232,587 | $130,369,162,897 | $22,665,069,690 | 17.39% |
| 7 | 7 | Chicago, Illinois | $120,649,125,594 | $108,616,667,535 | $12,032,458,059 | 11.08% |
| 8 | 8 | Seattle, Washington | $119,894,432,431 | $100,551,731,987 | $19,342,700,444 | 19.24% |
| 9 | 9 | San Francisco, Calif. | $111,115,763,668 | $98,952,033,098 | $12,163,730,570 | 12.29% |
| 10 | 11 | Savannah, Georgia | $82,472,671,175 | $72,545,576,486 | $9,927,094,689 | 13.68% |
| 11 | 10 | Buffalo, New York | $82,246,675,402 | $77,601,557,864 | $4,645,117,538 | 5.99% |
| 12 | 12 | Cleveland, Ohio | $77,575,803,260 | $69,837,369,038 | $7,738,434,222 | 11.08% |
| 13 | 13 | Miami, Florida | $72,078,088,844 | $65,898,071,729 | $6,180,017,115 | 9.38% |
| 14 | 14 | Philadelphia, Pa. | $69,203,265,820 | $58,005,790,166 | $11,197,475,654 | 19.30% |
| 15 | 15 | Dallas, Texas | $58,278,924,487 | $49,599,138,296 | $8,679,786,191 | 17.50% |
| 16 | 17 | El Paso, Texas | $52,238,557,920 | $47,921,799,187 | $4,316,758,733 | 9.01% |
| 17 | 18 | San Diego, California | $50,772,885,681 | $43,392,364,988 | $7,380,520,693 | 17.01% |
| 18 | 16 | Charleston, S. Carolina | $49,271,746,203 | $48,045,072,031 | $1,226,674,172 | 2.55% |
| 19 | 20 | Norfolk, Virginia | $44,452,456,136 | $40,274,714,178 | $4,177,741,958 | 10.37% |
| 20 | 19 | Ogdensburg, New York | $44,415,271,961 | $41,436,225,861 | $2,979,046,100 | 7.19% |
| 21 | 22 | Great Falls, Montana | $40,259,076,408 | $36,820,331,881 | $3,438,744,527 | 9.34% |
| 22 | 21 | Baltimore, Maryland | $39,639,021,735 | $38,619,563,558 | $1,019,458,177 | 2.64% |
| 23 | 25 | Tampa, Florida | $37,667,053,486 | $29,465,119,589 | $8,201,933,897 | 27.84% |
| 24 | 23 | Low Value Shipments | $36,960,859,345 | $32,154,682,418 | $4,806,176,927 | 14.95% |
| 25 | 24 | Boston, Massachusetts | $33,269,907,132 | $32,071,776,690 | $1,198,130,442 | 3.74% |
China, the district’s biggest trade partner, saw its exchange gain 24.5 percent to fall just short of the $17 billion mark. The Asian powerhouse accounts for 29 percent of all Dallas trade.
Other highlights:
Dallas posted a 2006 trade deficit just shy of $17 billion. In 2005, the deficit was $13.9 billion.
Thirteen countries did more than $1 million in trade with Dallas in 2006.
All but three of Dallas’ top import commodities posted growth. Passenger vehicle imports grew the most, jumping 137.5 percent to close the year at $685 million.
Among the roster of Dallas’ Top 20 traders, Poland experienced the greatest gains. Trade between Dallas and the European nation leaped to $546 million in 2006. A year earlier, it was less than $39 million. Exports fueled the increase.
Total U.S. trade reached $2.9 billion. Canada was the nation’s No. 1 trade partner, followed by China, which passed Mexico in 2006.
Los Angeles remained the nation’s top-ranked Customs district, followed by New York, Detroit and Houston.
Number of U.S. trade surpluses at 127 nations, highest since 1998 (02/21/2008)
U.S. trade breaks $3 trillion mark; first deficit decline in 15 years (02/15/2008)
Annual U.S. trade with a record 44 nations will exceed $10 billion (01/19/2008)
Annual trade growth forecast to slow but numerous records still will fall (01/17/2008)
U.S. exports to Putin's Russia growing far faster than national average (12/23/2007)
Baltimore, N.Y. among big gainers in exports (12/21/2007)
Aircraft, corn, gold exports growing rapidly (12/18/2007)
Slumping dollar means surging exports (11/13/2007)
With oil above $90 per barrel, crude and China play biggest role in deficit since 1992 (10/30/2007)
U.S. trade passes $2 trillion through August, a record (10/25/2007)
Exports, in GOP debate spotlight, continue brisk, record growth (10/09/2007)
U.S.-Burma trade vaporized in 2003 (09/30/2007)
Algeria, Vietnam among fastest-growing U.S. trade partners over five-year period (09/25/2007)
U.S. trade growth slowest in years (08/15/2007)
2nd U.S. TradeNumbers released (08/12/2007)
U.S. trade up and deficit down (07/13/2007)
1st Q: U.S. trade up slightly as import growth slows -- except with China (05/11/2007)
France, soon electing a new president, surpasses $10 billion in total trade (04/22/2007)
Handgun imports rise sharply, lead by Savannah, Miami, Chicago (04/17/2007)
U.S. trade rises a tepid 6 percent through February (04/16/2007)
South Korea car imports up 1,000% since 1992, but down last two years (04/10/2007)
It's a fact: Algeria, Angola, Chile, UAE, Austria are fastest-growing (04/10/2007)
U.S takes precedent-setting action against China in coated-paper case (04/02/2007)
Media weighs in on South Korea-U.S. free trade agreement (04/02/2007)
South Korea takes big step toward $100 Billion Club (04/02/2007)
U.S. exports advance broadly, from airplanes to corn to tractors to gold (03/19/2007)
Annual Statistics: A quick review of the Top 10 U.S. trade partners (02/24/2007)
U.S. trade, exports, imports, deficit set new annual records (02/15/2007)
Annual statistics: Dallas among nation's fastest-growing districts (02/14/2007)
Seattle registers largest, and one of few, surpluses (02/14/2007)
DC is nation's fastest-growing Customs district for 2006 (02/14/2007)
Philadelphia falls just shy of $70 billion on rapid growth (02/13/2007)
Sneak peek at the annual trade statistic release (01/22/2007)
U.S. has trade surplus with 115 nations, deficit with 116 (11/03/2006)
U.S. trade growth at 14 percent through August (10/16/2006)
Exports to Afghanistan are zooming; led by aircraft, motor vehicles (10/02/2006)
Romania, Bulgaria seek EU status, both rank in Top 100 in U.S. trade (09/28/2006)
Trade with Muslim world growing faster than average (09/25/2006)
Annual Report: No. 17 Saudi Arabia - Quenching the oil thirst (09/15/2006)
New Orleans rebounding, one year after Katrina (08/27/2006)
Six-month report: U.S. trade increases 13 percent, with fast growth from red-hot Chile (08/24/2006)
Annual Report: No. 24 Switzerland - Swiss trade keeping time (07/26/2006)
Annual Report: No. 25 Australia- U.S. posts $8.4 billion surplus (07/26/2006)
Annual Report: No. 23 Hong Kong - U.S. expands trade surplus (07/25/2006)
Annual Report: No. 21 Israel - Glittering give-and-take (07/23/2006)
Annual Report: No. 20 India - Rising player on trade scene (07/22/2006)
Annual Report: No. 19 Thailand - Gains seen in tech products (07/21/2006)
Annual Report: No. 16 Singapore - U.S. sees growth in surplus (07/20/2006)
Annual Report: No. 18 Belgium - Diamonds, medicines lead trade (07/19/2006)
Annual Report: No. 15 Ireland - Chemicals, drugs drive exports (07/17/2006)
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