The U.S. needs a new driver of growth as COVID-era fiscal stimulus is set to be replaced by deficit-cutting, and the consumer boom of 2021 and early 2022 fading. Exports should fill this need, but over the past six years, the United States has lost market share abroad and exporting companies at home. Between 2016 and 2021, the U.S.’ share of world exports fell:
Meanwhile, the count of U.S. exporting businesses dropped from 290,600 to 277,500.
We hope President Biden will take the State of the Union opportunity to launch an ambitious program to rebuild America’s export economy in the aftermath of the Trump administration’s retreat. This includes a return to efforts to reduce tariffs and other barriers to U.S. exports, strong support for the Ex-Im Bank’s export financing mission, and export promotion programs. American allies such as Japan, the U.K., and others have expressed hopes for closer trade and investment links to the United States, and officials such as Treasury Secretary Yellen have sketched out the outline of a “friendshoring” program that can achieve it, and there’s no better place to launch this than the SOTU.
This post is part of a series from PPI’s policy experts ahead of President Biden’s State of the Union address. Read more here.