US Congressional District Exports to China: 2002-11 (2012). This report examines sector-specific export growth by estimating exports to China for each of the 435 U.S. congressional districts. The Trade Partnership prepares this report annually for the US-China Business Council. Click here for a copy of this year's study.

For previous versions:
US Congressional District Exports to China: 2000-10 (2010)
US Congressional District Exports to China: 2000-09 (2010)
US Congressional District Exports to China: 2000-08 (2009)
US Congressional District Exports to China: 2000-07 (2008)
US Congressional District Exports to China: 2000-06 (2007)


New Trade Data on U.S. Textile Imports from China (2009). In 2008, House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Charles Rangel (D-NY) instructed the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) to publish biweekly import data for textile and apparel products from China. To help make these numbers more visually "digestible," The Trade Partnership has consolidated the data into user-friendly charts.


Role of China in Competitiveness of U.S. Consumer Electronics Industry (2006). Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC examined the increasing role of China in the network of global consumer electronics (CE) production and its impacts on the domestic industry. The study shows that growing CE imports from China are largely replacing those from other Asian suppliers and support the competitiveness of U.S. CE manufacturers, providing high-paying jobs for U.S. workers and low prices for American consumers. Prepared for the Consumer Electronics Association. Click here for a copy of the report.



Impact of Imports from China on U.S. Employment (2005). Imports from China have been blamed for unemployment and many other economic woes in the United States. However, a recent study by Trade Partnership Worldwide, LLC shows that imports from China support thousands of U.S. jobs. Prepared for the National Retail Federation. Click here for a copy of the report.



Market Basket Survey: Potential Impact on Consumers of Loss of MFN for China (1997). This paper analyzes the potential impact on consumers of the loss of China’s most-favored-nation (MFN) tariff status. It found that failure to renew China's MFN status would sharply reduce the variety of consumer electronics, apparel, footwear, and toy products available to consumers, and increase the prices of many of these products, in some cases dramatically. Report prepared for the National Retail Federation; copies available from The Trade Partnership.