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Scope
Data Sources
Methodology
Scope
This data set provides import values of edible products
(food and beverages) entering U.S. ports and their origin
of shipment. Data are from the U.S. Department of Commerce,
U.S. Census Bureau. Food and beverage import values are
compiled by calendar year into food groups corresponding
to major commodities or level of processing. At least
10 years of annual data are included, enabling users to
track long-term patterns.
Data Sources
U.S. Customs and Border Protection records commercial
merchandise shipments (imports) by country of origin,
dollar value or price, quantity or weight, and U.S. port
of entry. Because there is neither a standard unit for
trade volume nor conversion measure to transform trade
volumes into uniform units, agricultural imports are more
readily tracked by their dollar values.
Import values are reported as customs value, defined
as the price paid or payable for merchandise at the first
port of arrival in the United States, excluding U.S. import
duties, freight, insurance, and other charges incurred
in their exportation.
Trade data are published by the U.S. Department of Commerce,
U.S. Census
Bureau, Foreign Trade Division. For documentation,
see the Census web page on Information
on the Collection and Publication of Trade Statistics.
Census Bureau data are categorized based on a coding
system, established by the World Customs Organization,
called the International Harmonized Commodity Coding and
Classification System, or simply Harmonized System (HS).
HS is an international standard for world trade at two-digit,
four-digit, and six-digit levels. For example, 02 = meat
and edible meat offal; 0201 = meat of bovine animals,
fresh or chilled; and 020130 = bovine cuts, boneless,
fresh or chilled.
Each country has the option of supplementing the international
HS codes with greater detail. The United States adopted
a 10-digit code system and began using it for U.S. trade
on January 1, 1989. Import codes, known as the Harmonized
Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTS), are administered
by the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC). (See
Background
Information for U.S. Agricultural Trade Data for more
information on U.S. and international trade coding systems.)
Monthly and annual data on U.S. agricultural imports
are available from USDA Foreign Agricultural Service's
U.S. Trade Internet
System. Values and quantities can be accessed by HS
code and country of origin. Historical data start in 1989
and end at 2 months before the current month.
Methodology
The import categories included in this data product were
selected at the HS-6 code level and cover all food groups
in the ERS Food Availability
(Per Capita) Data System. (For more information, see
Food
Availability: Documentation.)
Of the HS-2 groupings used to classify agricultural commodities
and products, the following 20 HS-2 codes were selected
as foods and beverages:
HS 01 Live animals
HS 02 Meat, edible
HS 03 Fish, crustaceans
HS 04 Dairy products
HS 07 Edible vegetables
HS 08 Edible fruits, nuts
HS 09 Coffee, tea, spices
HS 10 Cereals
HS 11 Milling products
HS 12 Oilseeds
HS 13 Lac, gums, resins
HS 15 Fats, animal and vegetable
HS 16 Meat and fish preparations
HS 17 Sugars
HS 18 Cocoa
HS 19 Cereal, flour, starch
HS 20 Vegetable and fruit preparations
HS 21 Miscellaneous edible preparations
HS 22 Beverages
HS 33 Essential oils
The HS-4 and HS-6 codes under these HS-2 codes were scrutinized
for nonfood descriptions, such as those for animal feed,
industrial production, and plant propagation. Codes with
product descriptions that have primarily nonfood uses
were excluded (e.g., 030110, ornamental fish). Codes with
product descriptions that have both food and nonfood uses
are included (e.g., 1211, plant parts for food, perfumery,
pharmacy). For a full list of HS codes, see Harmonized
System (HS) codes for U.S. food imports.
The 20 HS-2 codes are combined into 14 food groups that
correspond to at least 1 food category in the ERS food
availability data (see the Estimating
Supply and Disappearance of Major Foods section of
Food
Availability: Documentation). Each of the 14 good
groups is then further divided into key product subgroups,
some of which represent various levels of processing.
At the food subgroup level, the top source countries
during the most recent calendar year (January to December)
are listed and ranked by import value in the most recent
year. Total imports by food group are then aggregated
to estimate U.S. food import value in a summary table.
In addition, import volumes are reported by food group and corresponding subgroups.
Import unit values are calculated by dividing the import values by their respective
volumes to gauge relative price changes among food groups and over time. Import
unit values are estimated for the 14 food groups, except for "other foods".
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