The Philippine Star

Trade gap widens to $18.9 B in H1

- By CZERIZA VALENCIA

The country’s trade deficit widened to $18.94 billion in the first semester of the year as imports continued to significan­tly outpace exports, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) reported yesterday.

Total external trade in goods in the first six months of the year rose 6.2 percent to $84.73 billion from $70.82 billion in the same period last year, the PSA said in its updated trade report. Imports grew 13.2 percent to $51.84 billion in 2018 from $45.78 billion previously. Exports, on the other hand, declined by 3.4 percent from $34.04 billion in 2017 to $32.89 billion in 2018.

This brought the country’s balance of trade in goods to $18.94 billion deficit in 2018, higher than the $11.75 billion deficit in 2017.

Electronic products continued to rake in the most dollars for the country with revenues of $18.33 billion in the first semester of 2018, up 5.4 percent from $17.40 billion in 2017. Outbound shipments of electronic products made up 55.7 percent of export revenues during the period.

Other top exports during the period were machinery and transport equipment; metal components; ignition wiring sets; gold; copper cathodes; coconut oil; and other mineral products.

Electronic products were also the country’s largest imported commodity in the first semester with inbound shipments rising 16 percent to $37.88 billion, comprising 73.1 percent of import payments.

Other top imports during the period were fuels; transport equipment; industrial machinery and equipment; iron and steel; food and live animals; telecommun­ication equipment; plastics; and cereals.

Trade still remained the most robust among traditiona­l partners such as China, Japan, Korea, which has trade deficits with the Philippine­s during the period.

Export-wise, the biggest sales comes from electronic products and machinery. Import-wise, most of the inbound shipments from these countries were electronic products, iron and steel, industrial equipment and fuel.

The country maintained a trade surplus with the US and Hong Kong in the first semester. The bulk of the exports to these destinatio­ns were electronic­s and manufactur­ed goods and gold.

Import-wise, most of the inbound shipments from these countries were cereals, animal feed stuff and fuels.

The Philippine­s also had active trade activity with Singapore and Thailand as well as European Union countries of which trade with Germany was strongest.

Major goods exported to the EU were electronic­s, machinery and transport equipment, coconut oil, tuna, and manufactur­ed goods.

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