Yes. Mexico's rice imports accounted for US$310 million, or 0.11% of total imports during 2010.
Mexico's imports of maize (corn) were of US$1.6 billion for 2010, representing 0.58% of total imports during that year.
Mexico is.From US point of view:Exports from US to Mexico: 8.3% of total (ranked 2nd)Imports from Mexico to US: 9.1% of total (ranked 3rd)From Mexican point of view:Exports from Mexico to US: 76.5% of total (ranked 1st)Imports from US to Mexico: 55.5% of total (ranked 1st)
US' oil imports from Canada equal 18.6% of total imports, while imports from Mexico equal 10.4%. In total, imports from both countries account for 29% of total oil imports.
Approximately 9.5% of total crude petroleum imports come from Mexico.
No.
Because 76.5% of its exports go to the United States; conversely, 55.5% of Mexico's imports come from the US.
DDT (dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane) is a strong insecticide.
The total amount equals some US$479 billion, with some $321 billion in imports from Mexico into the US and some US$158 billion on exports from the US into Mexico.
Yes. Both countries are somewhat integrated on economic terms, specially on business and trade:From US point of view:Exports from US to Mexico: 8.3% of total (ranked 2nd)Imports from Mexico to US: 9.1% of total (ranked 3rd)Investment from Mexico: 0.3% of total (US$ 36.9 billion)From Mexican point of view:Exports from Mexico to US: 76.5% of total (ranked 1st)Imports from US to Mexico: 55.5% of total (ranked 1st)Investment from the US: 49.8% of total (US$ 11.6 billion)
There is a trade amount of some US$294 billion, including US$179 billion on exports from Mexico into the United States, and US$115 billion on imports from the United States into Mexico.
Oil imports from Mexico (into the United States) total 1,132,000 barrels per day or 12.6% of total imports. Mexico is the third largest supplier of crude oil to the US, behind Canada and Saudi Arabia.