Jamaica Gleaner

US trade deficit widens in July

-

THE UNITED States’ trade deficit widened for the second straight month in July, reaching the highest level since February, as imports hit an all-time high. The deficit in goods with China and the European Union set records.

The Commerce Department said on Wednesday that the deficit in goods and services — the difference between what America sells and what it buys from other countries — rose to US$50.1 billion in July from US$45.7 billion in June. Exports slipped 1 per cent to US$211.1 billion. Imports increased 0.9 per cent to a record US$261.2 billion on increased purchases of trucks and computers.

The deficit rose despite efforts by President Donald Trump to bring it down by renegotiat­ing trade agreements and imposing taxes on imports.

The goods deficit with China rose 10 per cent in July to a record US$36.8 billion. The gap with the EU shot up 50 per cent to a record US$17.6 billion and with Canada nearly 58 per cent to US$3.1 billion. The July deficit with Mexico, though, plunged 25 per cent to US$5.5 billion.

So far this year, the trade deficit is up 7 per cent from January-July 2017. Mainstream economists blame persistent US trade deficits on an economic reality that can’t be changed much by trade policy: Americans spend more than they produce, and imports fill the gap. The strong US economy is also encouragin­g Americans to buy more foreign products.

“The core story here is that strong domestic demand is sucking in imports ... the trade deficit likely will be flat-to-higher over the next couple of months,” Ian Shepherdso­n, chief economist at Pantheon Economics, wrote in a research report.

In July, the United States ran a deficit of US$73.1 billion in goods such as cars and machinery but recorded a surplus of more than US$23 billion in services such as education and banking.

 ?? AP ?? The port of Miami.
AP The port of Miami.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica