Wednesday, May 13, 2026

COMING SOON >> EXPANDED DATA: Global Value Chain Analyzer with U.S. Department of Commerce BEA Realease May 21 `2026

  
US Department of Commerce Bureau of Economic Analysis

BEA Announcement: BEA to Release New and Expanded Data on Global Value Chains

SUITLAND, Md. — BEA will release new and expanded statistics on the role of global value chains in the U.S. economy on May 21 at 10 a.m. 

The release will include new statistics on global value chains for 2024 and updated statistics for 2007-2023. The new global value chains statistics will show the mix of domestic and foreign content used in the production of goods and services in the United States, aiding analysis of increasingly complicated supply chains. 

This release marks an expansion of global value chain statistics (also called trade in value added) to include each of the major components of GDP: consumer spending, investment, government spending, and exports. The statistics, for example, will provide information on consumer purchases of domestically produced items versus imported items. Previously, these statistics were available just for U.S. exports.  

BEA's tool to help access these data and create custom tables and will be renamed the Global Value Chain Analyzer with the May 21 release. 

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Trade in value-added

 

The goods and services we buy are composed of inputs from various countries around the world. 
  • However, the flows of goods and services within these global production chains are not always reflected in conventional measures of international trade. 
The development of measures of Trade in Value-Added (TiVA) addresses this issue by considering the value added by each country in the production of goods and services that are consumed worldwide. 
 
TiVA indicators are designed to better inform policy makers by providing new insights into the commercial relations between nations.
 
Policy sub-issue

About

Trade in Value-Added (TiVA) indicators provide insights into:

  • Domestic and foreign value added content of gross exports by exporting industry
  • Services content of gross exports by exporting industry, by type of service and value added origin
  • Participation in global value chains (GVCs) via intermediate imports embodied in exports (backward linkages) and domestic value added in partners’ exports and final demand (forward linkages)
  • Industrial activity's global orientation, i.e. the share of industry value added that meets foreign final demand
  • Country and industry origins of value added in final demand, including the origin of value added in final consumption (by households and government) and in gross fixed capital formation (investment by businesses)
  • Bilateral trade relationships based on flows of value added embodied in domestic final demand
  • Inter-regional and intra-regional relationships
  • Domestic value added content of imports
 


 
 
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COMING SOON >> EXPANDED DATA: Global Value Chain Analyzer with U.S. Department of Commerce BEA Realease May 21 `2026

   BEA Announcement: BEA to Release New and Expanded Data on Glob...