Error processing SSI file


Information Section


This file is also available in PDF format for easy printing.

GOODS

CENSUS BASIS

The Census basis goods data are compiled from the documents collected by the U.S.
Customs Service and reflect the movement of goods between foreign countries and the
50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and U.S.
Foreign Trade Zones.  They include government and non-government shipments of goods,
and exclude shipments between the United States and its territories and possessions,
transactions with U.S. military, diplomatic and consular installations abroad, U.S.
goods returned to the United States by its Armed Forces, personal and household effects
of travelers, and in-transit shipments. The General Imports value reflects the total
arrival of merchandise from foreign countries that immediately enters consumption
channels, warehouses, or Foreign Trade Zones.

For imports, the value reported is the U.S. Customs Service appraised value of
merchandise;  generally, the price paid for merchandise for export to the United States.
Import duties, freight, insurance, and other charges incurred in bringing merchandise
to the United States are excluded.

Exports are valued at the f.a.s.- free alongside ship value of merchandise at the U.S.
port of export, based on the transaction price including inland freight, insurance, and
other charges incurred in placing the merchandise alongside the carrier at the U.S. port
of exportation.

Monthly data include actual month's transactions as well as a small number of transactions
for previous months.  Each month we revise the aggregate seasonally adjusted (current and
chain-weighted dollar) and unadjusted export, import and trade balance figures, as well as
the end-use totals for the prior month.  SITC and country detail data are not revised
monthly.  The timing adjustment shown in Exhibit 14 is the difference between monthly data
as originally reported and as recompiled. Quarterly revisions are made to the chain-weighted
dollar series. In the last month of each quarter, the current and previous quarter are
revised to incorporate the Bureau of Labor Statistics' monthly revisions and align Census
and the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis' quarterly data.  Annual revisions for the months
are made in June to reflect corrections received subsequent to the monthly revision.  These
revisions are reflected in totals, end-use, SITC and country summary data.  The monthly
end-use, commodity, and country and area data presented in this release are on a Census
basis.  This refers to Exhibits 6 - 18.

U.S./CANADA DATA EXCHANGE AND SUBSTITUTION

The data for U.S. exports to Canada are derived from import data compiled by Canada.  The
use of Canada's import data to produce U.S. export data requires several alignments in order
to compare the two series.

     1.   Coverage -- Canadian imports are based on country of origin.  U.S. goods shipped
          from a third country are included.  U.S. exports exclude these foreign shipments.
          For March 2005, these shipments totaled $65.1 million.  U.S. export coverage also
          excludes certain Canadian postal shipments.  For March 2005, these shipments
          totaled $15.8 million.

          U.S. import coverage includes shipments of railcars and locomotives from Canada.
          Effective with January 2004 statistics, Canada excludes these shipments from
          its goods exports to the United States, therefore creating coverage differences
          between the two countries for these goods.

     2.   Valuation -- Canadian imports are valued at the point of origin in the United
          States.  However, U.S. exports are valued at the port of exit in the United States
          and include inland freight charges, making the U.S. export value slightly larger.
          Canada requires inland freight to be reported.  Inland freight charges for March
          2005 accounted for 1.9 percent of the value of  U.S. exports to Canada.

     3.   Reexports -- U.S. exports include reexports of foreign goods.  Again, the aggregate
          U.S. export figure is slightly larger.  For March 2005, reexports to Canada were
          $2,470 million.

     4.   Exchange Rate -- Average monthly exchange rates are applied to convert the
          published data to U.S. currency.  For March 2005, the average exchange rate was
          1.2160 Canadian dollars per U.S. dollar.

     5.   Other -- There are other minor differences which are statistically insignificant,
          such as rounding error.

Canadian Estimates

Effective with January 2001 statistics, the current month data for exports to Canada
contain an estimate for late arrivals and corrections.  The following month, this estimate
is replaced, in the press release tables only, with the actual value of late receipts and
corrections.  This estimate improves the current month data for exports to Canada and
treats late receipts for exports to Canada in a manner more consistent with the treatment
of late receipts for exports to other countries.

Nonsampling errors

The goods data are a complete enumeration of documents collected by the U.S. Customs
Service and are not subject to sampling errors; but they are subject to several types
of nonsampling errors.  Quality assurance procedures are performed at every stage of
collection, processing and tabulation; however the data are still subject to several
types of nonsampling errors.  The most significant of these include reporting errors,
undocumented shipments, timeliness, data capture errors, and errors in the estimation
of low-valued transactions.

Reporting Errors: Reporting errors are mistakes or omissions made by importers, exporters
or their agents in their import or export declarations.  Most errors involve missing or
invalid commodity classification codes and missing or incorrect quantities or shipping
weights.  They have a negligible effect on import, export and balance of trade statistics.
However, they can affect the detailed commodity statistics.

Undocumented Shipments: Federal regulations require importers, exporters or their agents
to report all merchandise shipments above established exemption levels.  The U.S. Census
Bureau has determined that not all required documents are filed, particularly for exports.

Timeliness and Data Capture Errors: The U.S. Census Bureau captures import and export
information from administrative documents and through various automated collection
programs.  Documents may be lost, and data may be incorrectly keyed, coded or recorded.
Transactions may be included in a subsequent month's statistics if received late.

Low-valued Transactions: The total values of transactions valued as much as or below $2,500
for exports and $2,000 ($250 for certain quota items) for imports are estimated for each
country, using factors based on the ratios of low-valued shipments to individual country
totals for past periods.

The U.S. Census Bureau recommends that data users incorporate this information into
their analyses, as nonsampling errors could impact the conclusion drawn from the
results.  For a detailed discussion of errors affecting the goods data, see "U.S.
Merchandise Trade Statistics: A Quality Profile" available on the INTERNET at
www.census.gov/foreign-trade/aip/index.htm#infopapers or from the Foreign Trade
Division, U.S. Census Bureau.

AREA GROUPINGS (See Exhibits 14 and 14A)

North America - Canada, Mexico

Europe - Albania, Andorra, Armenia, Austria, Azerbijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia-
Hercegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Faroe Islands,
Finland, France, Germany, Georgia, Gibralter, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy,
Liechtenstein, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta and Gozo,
Macedonia, Moldova, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, San
Marino, Serbia and Montenegro, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Svalbard, Jan Mayen Island,
Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, United Kingdom,
Uzbekistan, Vatican City.

European Union - Austria, Belgium, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland,
France, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta,
Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom.

Euro Area - Austria,  Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland,  Italy,
Luxembourg, Netherlands, Portugal, Spain.

Pacific Rim - Australia, Brunei, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Macao,
Malaysia, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Singapore, Taiwan.

South/Central America - Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Aruba, Bahamas,
Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Bolivia, Brazil, British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands,
Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, El Salvador,
Falkland Islands, French Guiana, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Guatemala, Guyana, Haiti, Honduras,
Jamaica, Martinique, Montserrat, Netherlands Antilles, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay,
Peru, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, Trinidad
and Tobago, Turks and Caicos Islands, Uruguay, Venezuela.

OPEC - Algeria, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Libya, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia,
United Arab Emirates, Venezuela.

Africa - Algeria, Angola, Benin, Botswana, British Indian Ocean Territories, Burkina,
Burundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Congo (Brazzaville),
Congo (Kinshasa), Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, French Southern
and Antarctic Lands, Gabon, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Kenya,
Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Mayotte, Morocco,
Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Reunion, Rwanda, St. Helena, Sao Tome and Principe,
Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo,
Tunisia, Uganda, Western Sahara, Zambia, Zimbabwe.

Adjustments for Seasonal and Working-Day Variations

Goods are initially classified under the Harmonized System (HS) which describes and
measures the characteristics of goods traded.  Combining trade into approximately 140
export and 140 import end-use categories makes it possible to examine goods according to
their principal uses (See Exhibits 7 and 8).  These categories are used as the basis for
computing the seasonal and working-day adjusted data.  These adjusted data are then
summed to the six end-use aggregates for publication (Exhibit 6).  These data are
provided to the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis, from the U.S. Census  Bureau, for use
in the Balance of Payments and the National Income and Product Accounts.

The seasonal adjustment procedure is based on a model that estimates the monthly
movements as percentages above or below the general level of each end-use commodity
series (unlike other methods that redistribute the actual series values over the calendar
year).  Because of the extremely variable movements of the data series for aircraft,
users studying data trends may wish to analyze aircraft separately from other trade.

Adjustments for Price Change

Data adjusted for seasonal variation on a chained-dollar basis (2000 base year) are
presented in Exhibits 10 and 11.  This adjustment for price change is done using the
Fisher chain-weighted methodology.  The deflators are primarily based upon the monthly
price indexes published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics using techniques developed for
the National Income and Product Accounts by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.

SITC Data

Goods data appearing in Exhibit 15 are classified in terms of the Standard International
Trade Classification (SITC) Revision 3.  Agricultural goods consist of non-marine food
products and other products of agriculture which have not passed through complex
processes of manufacture, such as raw hides and skins, fats and oils, and wine.  A few
goods such as essential oils, starches, casein, and albumin, considered to be
agricultural by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, have been excluded from agricultural
goods and are included in manufactured goods where they are classified in the SITC.

Manufactured goods conform to the SITC sections that include chemicals and related
products; manufactured goods classified chiefly by material; machinery and transport
equipment; miscellaneous manufactured articles; and goods and transactions not classified
elsewhere.

Reexports are foreign merchandise entering the country as imports, and  at the time of
exportation are in substantially the same condition as when imported.  Reexports,
included in overall export totals, appear as separate line items in Exhibit 15.

Advanced Technology Products (ATP)

About 500 of some 22,000 commodity classification codes used in reporting U.S.
merchandise trade are identified as "advanced technology" codes and they meet the
following criteria:

     1.   The code contains products whose technology is from a recognized high technology
          field (e.g., biotechnology).

     2.   These products represent leading edge technology in that field.

     3.   Such products constitute a significant part of all items covered in the selected
          classification code.

The aggregation of the goods results in a measure of advanced technology trade which
appears in Exhibit 16.  This product and commodity-based measure of advanced technology
differs from broader NAICS industry-based measures which include all goods produced by a
particular industry group, regardless of the level of technology embodied in the goods.

BALANCE OF PAYMENTS (BOP) BASIS

Goods on a Census basis are adjusted by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis to goods on
a BOP basis to bring the data in line with the concepts and definitions used to prepare
the international and national accounts.  Broadly, the adjustments include changes in
ownership that occur without goods passing into or out of the customs territory of the
United States.  These adjustments are necessary to supplement coverage of the Census
basis data, to eliminate duplication of transactions recorded elsewhere in the
international accounts, and to value transactions according to a standard definition.

The export adjustments include:

     U.S. military sales contracts - This deduction of U.S. military sales contracts is
     made because the U.S. Census Bureau has included these contracts in the goods data,
     but BEA includes them in the service category "Transfers Under U.S. Military Sales
     Contracts."  BEA's source material for these contracts is more comprehensive, but
     has no distinction between goods and services.

     Private gift parcels - This addition is made for parcels mailed to foreigners by
     individuals through the U.S. Postal Service.  (Only commercial shipments are
     covered in Census goods exports.)

     Gold exports, nonmonetary - This addition is made for gold that is purchased by
     foreign official agencies from private dealers in the United States and held at the
     Federal Reserve Bank of New York.  The Census data only include gold that leaves the
     customs territory.

     Some smaller adjustments are also made to exports:
     Deductions for repairs of goods, developed motion picture film, and military grant-aid.
     Additions for sales of fish in U.S. territorial waters, exports of electricity to
     Mexico, and vessels and oil rigs that change ownership for which no export document
     is filed.

The import adjustments include:

     Inland freight in Canada - An addition is made for inland freight in Canada.  Imports
     of goods from all countries are valued at the foreign port of export, including
     inland freight charges ("customs value").  In the case of Canada, this should be the
     cost of the goods at the U.S. border.  However, the customs value for imports for
     certain  Canadian goods is the point of origin in Canada.  The BEA makes an addition
     for the inland freight charges of transporting these Canadian goods to the U.S. border
     to make the value comparable to the customs value as reported by all other countries.
     Insurance and freight charges for transporting goods to the United States from all
     other countries to the U.S. border are included in services by the BEA.  (The same
     procedure is used for Mexico as an Other Adjustment, but is much smaller.)

     Gold imports, nonmonetary - This addition is made for gold sold by foreign official
     agencies to private purchasers out of stock held at the Federal Reserve Bank of New
     York.  The Census data only include gold that enters the customs territory.

     Imports by U.S. military agencies - This deduction of U.S. military sales contracts is
     made because the U.S. Census Bureau has included these contracts in the goods data, but
     BEA includes them in the service category "Direct Defense Expenditures."  BEA's source
     material is more comprehensive, but has no distinction between goods and services.

     Some smaller adjustments are also made to imports:
     Deductions for repairs of goods and developed motion picture film.  Additions for
     imported electricity from Mexico, conversion of vessels for commercial use, repairs to
     U.S. vessels abroad, and valuation of prepackaged software imports at market value.

SERVICES

The statistics are estimates of services transactions between foreign countries and the
50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and other U.S.
territories and possessions.  Transactions with U.S. military, diplomatic, and consular
installations abroad are excluded because they are considered to be part of the U.S. economy.

Services are shown in seven broad categories.  Types of services for imports and exports
are the same for six of the seven categories.  For the seventh, exports is "Transfers
Under U.S. Military Sales Contracts" while for imports the category is "Direct Defense
Expenditures."  The following is a brief description of the types of services included
in each category:

     Travel - Purchases of services and goods by U.S. travelers abroad and by foreign
     visitors to the United States.  A traveler is defined as a person who stays for a
     period of less than 1 year in a country of which the person is not a resident.
     Includes expenditures for food, lodging, recreation, gifts, and other items
     incidental to a foreign visit.

     Passenger Fares - Fares paid by residents of one country to residents of other
     countries.  Receipts consist of fares received by U.S. carriers from foreign
     residents for travel between the United States and foreign countries and between
     two foreign points.  Payments consist of fares paid by U.S. residents to foreign
     carriers for travel between the United States and foreign countries.

     Other Transportation - Charges for the transportation of goods by ocean, air,
     waterway, pipeline, and rail carriers to and from the United States.  Includes
     freight charges, operating expenses that transportation companies incur in
     foreign ports, and payments for vessel charter and aircraft rentals with crew.

     Royalties and License Fees - Transactions with foreign residents involving
     intangible assets and proprietary rights, such as the use of patents, techniques,
     processes, formulas, designs, know-how, trademarks, copyrights, franchises, and
     manufacturing rights.  The term "royalties" generally refers to payments for the
     utilization of copyrights or trademarks, and the term "license fees" generally
     refers to payments for the use of patents or industrial processes.

     Other Private Services - Transactions with affiliated foreigners, for which no
     identification by type is available, and of transactions with unaffiliated
     foreigners.  (The term "affiliated" refers to a direct investment relationship,
     which exists when a U.S. person has ownership or control, directly or indirectly,
     of 10 percent or more of a foreign business enterprise's voting securities or the
     equivalent, or when a foreign person has a similar interest in a U.S. enterprise.)
     Transactions with unaffiliated foreigners consist of education services; financial
     services (includes commissions and other transactions fees associated with the
     purchase and sale of securities and noninterest income of banks, and excludes
     investment income); insurance services; telecommunications services (includes
     transmission services and value-added services); and business, professional, and
     technical services.  Included in the last group are advertising services; computer
     and data processing services; database and other information services; research,
     development, and testing services; management, consulting, and public relations
     services; legal services; construction, engineering, architectural, and mining
     services; industrial engineering services; installation, maintenance, and repair of
     equipment; and other services, including medical services and film and tape rentals.

     Transfers Under U.S. Military Sales Contracts (Exports only) - Exports of goods and
     services in which U.S. Government military agencies participate.  Includes both
     goods, such as equipment, and services, such as repair services and training, that
     cannot be separately identified.

     Direct Defense Expenditures (Imports only) - Expenditures incurred by U.S. military
     agencies abroad, including expenditures by U.S. personnel, payments of wages to
     foreign residents, construction expenditures, payments for foreign contractual
     services, and procurement of foreign goods.  Includes both goods and services that
     cannot be separately identified.

     U.S. Government Miscellaneous Services - Transactions of U.S. Government nonmilitary
     agencies with foreign residents.  Most of these transactions involve the provision
     of services to, or purchases of services from, foreigners; transfers of some goods
     are also included.

Services estimates are based on quarterly, annual, and benchmark surveys and partial
information generated from monthly reports.  Service transactions are estimated at market
prices.  Estimates are seasonally adjusted when statistically significant seasonal
patterns are present.  No country or area detail is available due to the lack of adequate
source data upon which to base estimates.

The revision policy is as follows:  Each month, a preliminary estimate for the current
month and a revised estimate for the immediately preceding month are released.  After a
revised month is released, no further changes are made to that month until more
complete source data become available in March, June, September, and December.  The
releases in March, June, September, and  December contain revised data for the previous
six months.  The release in March also contains revisions for all months of the previous
year in order to align the seasonally adjusted monthly data with annual totals.  The
release in June contains annual revisions, which reflect updated source data and changes
in estimating methodologies.

Quarterly and annual estimates of services are included as part of the U.S. international
transactions accounts, published in the April, July, October, and January issues of the
Survey of Current Business.  The next release of the U.S. international transactions
accounts is scheduled for June 17, 2005.  The Survey is available from the Superintendent
of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402.

     MONTHLY RELEASE SCHEDULE

DATE                     Day


Jan. . . . .03-11-05     Friday
Feb. . . . .04-12-05     Tuesday
Mar. . . . .05-11-05     Wednesday
Apr. . . . .06-10-05     Friday
May. . . . .07-13-05     Wednesday
Jun. . . . .08-12-05     Friday

Jul. . . . .09-13-05     Tuesday
Aug. . . . .10-13-05     Thursday
Sep. . . . .11-10-05     Thursday
Oct. . . . .12-14-05     Wednesday
Nov. . . . .01-12-06     Thursday
Dec. . . . .02-10-06     Friday

ELECTRONIC AVAILABILITY

The FT-900 and supplement are available on the following:

INTERNET  The U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services reports are available at:
www.census.gov/ft900 or www.bea.gov/bea/di/home/trade.htm.

STAT-USA  The U.S. Department of Commerce's electronic information facility. Call
1 800 STAT-USA for product information.

Additional data and information on goods are obtainable from: Foreign Trade Division,
U.S. Census Bureau,  Washington, D.C. 20233

Additional data and information on services are obtainable from: Balance of Payments
Division, U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis,  Washington, D.C.  20230