
U.S. exports to Mexico are double those to China, and second only to Canada. (AP Photo/LM Otero)
And while many of these goods come from border states—Texas, Arizona,
New Mexico and California—Mexico matters for much more of the union.
Seventeen states send more than 10 percent of their exports to Mexico,
and it is the number one or two destination for U.S. goods for nearly
half the country. The graph below shows those states most economically
dependent on our southern neighbor—notice that South Dakota and Nebraska
outpace New Mexico and California.
These flows are only accelerating. During the first ten months of 2012 exports heading south grew by $17 billion (or 10 percent) compared to 2011, reaching a total of $181 billion. They include petroleum products (some $17 billion worth) and intermediate goods such as vehicle parts, electrical apparatuses, industrial supplies, metals, and chemicals (over $40 billion combined). Spurred on by deep supply chains, these pieces and parts move fluidly back and forth across the border (often quite a few times) before ending up as finished goods on store shelves in both countries.

Graph U.S. exports depend on Mexico
These flows are only accelerating. During the first ten months of 2012 exports heading south grew by $17 billion (or 10 percent) compared to 2011, reaching a total of $181 billion. They include petroleum products (some $17 billion worth) and intermediate goods such as vehicle parts, electrical apparatuses, industrial supplies, metals, and chemicals (over $40 billion combined). Spurred on by deep supply chains, these pieces and parts move fluidly back and forth across the border (often quite a few times) before ending up as finished goods on store shelves in both countries.
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