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PRESS STATEMENT 2017 State of the U.S. Textile Industry • • • • ➢ ➢ ➢ ➢ 1 Source: U.S. Census Bureau Annual Survey of Manufactures (ASM). Data covers NAICS categories 313 (Textile Mills), 314 (Textile Product Mills), 315 (Apparel), and 32522 (Artificial and Synthetic Fibers and Filaments). 2016 • • • • • • • • • • • • Data for NAICS 32522 is not yet available. Our 2016 estimate for the value of shipments in that category is $7.4 billion. 2 Source: U.S. Census Bureau Annual Survey of Manufactures (ASM). Data covers NAICS categories 313 (Textile Mills), 314 (Textile Product Mills), 315 (Apparel), and 32522 (Artificial and Synthetic Fibers and Filaments). 2016 Data for NAICS 32522 is not yet available. Our estimate for the value of shipments in that category is based on data from 2015. 3 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Annual Capital Expenses Survey (ACES). Data covers NAICS categories 313 (Textile Mills), 314 (Textile Product Mills), and 315 (Apparel). 4 Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Cotton Council, and the American Sheep Industry Association. 5 Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics 6 Source: Data for textiles and apparel is from The Export Market Report produced by the U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of Textiles and Apparel (OTEXA). U.S. export data for cotton, wool, and fine animal hair is calculated from the U.S. International Trade Commission Interactive Tariff and Trade DataWeb using HTS Codes 5101, 5102, 5103 (wool), 5201, 5202, and 5203 (cotton). • • • • • • • • • • • • • 7 Source: U.N. COMTRADE Database Source: U.S. Commerce Department and U.S. International Trade Commission 9 Id. 10 The top 4 exports markets by country for the entire textile supply chain are (1) Mexico - $6.3 billion, (2) Canada $5.2 billion, (3) China, Hong Kong and Macau - $1.8 billion, and (4) Honduras - $1.5 billion respectively. 8 ▪ ▪ ▪ ▪ U.S. TEXTILES BY THE NUMBERS VALUE OF SHIPMENTS 1 2016 EMPLOYMENT 2 2016 Value of Shipments for Man-Made Fibers, Yarns, Fabrics, Apparel, & Sewn Products in $ Billions 2016 Textile Supply Chain Jobs in Thousands 80 70 25.7 $74.4 52.5 113.9 $67.2 60 50 126.6 40 TOTAL 565K Jobs 115.0 30 20 10 131.3 0 2009 2016 CAPITAL INVESTMENT 3 Yarn & Fabrics Cotton Farming & Related Industry Home Furnishings, Carpet, & Non-Apparel Sewn Products Wool Growing & Related Industry Apparel Man-Made Fibers Capital Investment in U.S. Yarn, Fabric, Apparel, & Sewn Product Manufacturing Up $595M in Last 7 Years– Data in $ Billions $1.96 2000 $1.37 TOP 5 STATES FOR TEXTILE JOBS IN 2015 4 1. Georgia ............................................................... 48,876 1500 2. North Carolina ................................................. 36,774 3. South Carolina ................................................ 24,446 1000 4. California ............................................................ 17,066 500 5. Tennessee .......................................................... 13,840 $405 Figures exclude apparel manufacturing and cotton & wool farming jobs. 0 2009 2016 EXPORTS OF FIBERS,YARNS, FABRICS APPAREL & SEWN PRODUCTS 5 2016 EXPORT BREAKDOWN BY CATEGORY 6 In $ Billions 30 $26.3 25 20 $4.0B $4.5B $8.6B $3.6B $5.6B $20.1 15 $26.3 Billion 10 Cotton, Wool & Fine Animal Hair 5 0 Man-Made Fibers & Yarns Home Furnishings, Carpet, & Non-Apparel Sewn Products 2009 Fabrics Apparel 2016 2016 EXPORT BREAKDOWN BY REGION 7 TOP 4 EXPORT MARKETS BY COUNTRY 8 In $ Billions 2016 Data in $ Billions Asia $7.0B 1. Mexico .................................................. $6.3B TOTAL Europe $2.8B NAFTA $11.5B 2. Canada ................................................. $5.2B $26.3B Rest of World CAFTA-DR $1.8B $3.2B Rest of World = $888M to South America, $354M to Oceania, $327M to Africa and $267M to other North America 3. China* .................................................... $1.8B 4. Honduras............................................... $1.5B *Data for China includes exports to Hong Kong and Macau. SOURCES : 1. U.S. Census Bureau, Annual Survey of Manufactures (ASM), value of shipments for NAICS 313, 314, 315, & 32522. 2015 data used to compute 2016 NAICS 32522 figure. 2. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Department of Agriculture, National Cotton Council and American Sheep Industry Association. 3. U.S. Census Bureau, Annual Capital Expenditures Survey (ACES), NAICS 313, 314, & 315. 4. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Quarterly Census on Employment and Wages (QCEW), NAICS 313, 314, & 32522 only. 5. U.S. Department of Commerce and U.S. International Trade Commission 6. U.S. Department of Commerce and U.S. International Trade Commission 7. U.S. Department of Commerce and U.S. International Trade Commission 8. U.S. Department of Commerce and U.S. International Trade Commission NCTO.ORG | @NCTO K EC TAG CH HE T THE TEXTILE JOURNEY OF A PAIR OF PANTS WWW.NCTO.ORG Another way to buy American is to check the tag for apparel made in our hemisphere. Track the textile journey of this pair of pants made with U.S. fiber, yarns and fabrics and sewn in Mexico. CHECK THE TAG. NOT ALL IMPORTS ARE CREATED EQUAL. PAN T S FIBER 1 OLD AT RET AIL SS M 1 ADE INTO YA RN FIBER I E AD ROWN OR M SG 2 5 FIBER IS GROWN OR MADE Cotton, polyester and other fibers are grown and produced in the U.S. 2 FIBERS MADE INTO YARN FABRIC SEW N IN TO PANTS 4 EN INTO F IC 3 WOV ABR YAR N Fibers are turned into yarn at manufacturing facilities across the U.S 3 YARN WOVEN INTO FABRIC Yarn then is woven or knit into fabric in U.S. facilities. 4 FABRIC SEWN INTO PANTS U.S. fabric is exported to Central America and Mexico where it is sewn into pants and then shipped back to the U.S. with the ‘Made In’ tag from that country. 5 PANTS SOLD AT RETAIL From U.S. coast to coast, pants are purchased at retail. *MOST, BUT NOT ALL, APPAREL IMPORTED FROM WESTERN HEMISPHERE COUNTRIES CONTAIN U.S. INPUTS. *AMERICAN INPUTS ALMOST NEVER ARE USED IN ASIAN-MADE CLOTHING.