By Arthur Dos Santos, Masai Gordon, and Adam Prince
Before COVID-19, few Americans thought twice about where their goods came from. However, when store shelves emptied and exports slowed, the fragility of the global trade system became impossible to ignore. We explore how COVID-19 affected U.S. imports and exports. Pre-pandemic, global trade was experiencing steady growth, shaped by decades of increasing globalization, technological advancements, and expanding international agreements. Throughout the 1990s and the early 2000s, global trade skyrocketed, with the formation of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and major trade deals like NAFTA, which created a free trade zone across North America. The U.S. became increasingly involved in global supply chains. In the early 2010s, trade continued to grow, but new tensions arose. The U.S. saw rising trade deficits and growing concern over reliance on foreign production. Trade levels remained high, with the U.S. being one of the world’s top importers and exporters. Continue reading