Take 2 Minutes to Find the Best Country to Source Your Product
You’ve decided on a product to import. The next step is to locate suppliers. But where in the world do you start?
With a powerful (and free) online tool provided by the Office of Trade and Industry Information from the U.S. Department of Commerce, you can find trade statistics in a matter of minutes.
The excellent online interactive tool, known as TradeStats Express, provides statistical results based on your input of product, dollar volumes, and date ranges. You can also use this tool to review exports leaving the U.S. headed for other shores. It’s a fascinating and fun tool, and it provides global trade statistics with ease.
Let’s take the following example: you want to import cut flowers and want to find out which countries are major import sources based on dollar volume. Quick interaction using TradeStats Express (located at http://tse.export.gov/) gave us our answer.
In the TradeStats Express tool, we set the Product flow to “Imports” and changed the Product item to Harmonized System Code HS0603 for cut flowers. After setting our other display parameters we see the following chart:

It appears that the highest volume of imported cut flowers is arriving from Colombia. In 2008, U.S. businesses imported $501,552,000 from Colombia, while in second place was Ecuador, with $134,051,000. The Netherlands came in third, at $60,216,000. We can also see the five-year trend in Colombia’s import numbers is on the rise, while the Netherlands is seeing a loss of imported volume.
With these statistics on the cut-flower trade, we can quickly determine which country to focus our energies in for sourcing suppliers.
Along with dollar-volume trends, it’s also important to understand trade and political relationships between the U.S. and the source country. Temporary embargoes are put in place from time to time by the U.S. government, resulting in additional duties on goods arriving from certain locations. Quotas may also be in place, preventing some product categories from being imported after a certain volume is reached. Textiles and garments are often subject to quotas. A quick conversation with your customs broker will give you some direction on quotas and embargoes for your particular product or country.
A wealth of information is available online for U.S. imports at the U.S. Department of Commerce International Trade Administration, most of it at no cost.

