Commerce Department pushes small businesses to increase exports

Jennifer Collins Jun 9, 2011
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Commerce Department pushes small businesses to increase exports

Jennifer Collins Jun 9, 2011
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Jeremy Hobson: Later this morning we’ll find out how much the United States is buying and selling from other countries when the Commerce Department releases the latest figures on international trade. President Obama has said the future of American competitiveness depends on exports and he wants to double sales of U.S. products abroad in the next few years. But with all that exporting — could the outsourcing of jobs follow?

Jennifer Collins has that story.


Jennifer Collins: Jared Carr’s family owns Osagian Canoes in Lebanon, Mo. Carr has always wanted to export more of the boats. The trouble was — the shipping added $500 to a $1,000 canoe.

Jared Carr: With our canoes, you can’t really fold them up. I wish I could create the one that was like the Jetsons’ car.

So, instead of making a canoe that collapsed into that briefcase George Jetson carried to work, Carr hired a small manufacturer in Denmark to do the finishing work.

Carr: By not welding them together, we’re able to stack them up in hundreds and two-hundreds where we can actually ship them and make it cost-effective for the end user.

And it puts Osagian among the ranks of the 250,000 U.S. small businesses that bring in $500 billion a year through exports.

Karen Mills: Small businesses are the fastest growing part of exports.

Karen Mills is the head of the Small Business Administration. Her agency — along with the Commerce Department — advises small businesses to access loans and trains them to tap into overseas markets. Osagian attended a training last year.

Mills: More exports means more American jobs.

But it may mean sending some jobs overseas. Dante Di Gregorio teaches international trade at the University of New Mexico. He says there’s a fine line between exporting and outsourcing.

Dante Di Gregorio: In the process of developing export ties, most international partners want to see it in both directions.

Chile buys mining equipment from the U.S., but Chilean workers put it together. South Korea buys high-tech equipment from the U.S., but it’s installed by Korean engineers. He says that kind of activity is a good thing.

Di Gregorio: Trade is a two-way street and there can be direct benefits to the U.S. from certain outsourced activities.

Osagian hires at least two workers in Missouri for every person in Denmark.

I’m Jennifer Collins for Marketplace.

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