Business Day

US deficit at five-month high

• Gap increases for second straight month as exports fall and imports rise, threatenin­g to curb gross domestic growth in third quarter

- Agency Staff Washington

The US trade deficit rose to a five-month high in July as exports of soybeans and aircraft declined and imports hit a record high, suggesting the Trump administra­tion’s protection­ist policy was not having the desired effect.

The US trade deficit rose to a five-month high in July as exports of soya beans and civilian aircraft declined and imports hit a record high, suggesting the Trump administra­tion’s protection­ist policy was so far not having the desired effect.

The administra­tion’s “America First” policies have left the US embroiled in tit-for-tat tariffs with the EU, Canada and Mexico as well as an escalating trade war with China. The goods trade deficit with China surged to a record high in July.

The commerce department said on Wednesday the trade gap jumped 9.5% to $50.1bn, increasing for a second straight month, suggesting that trade could be a drag on economic growth in the third quarter. Data for June was revised to show the trade deficit rising to $45.7bn, instead of the previously reported $46.3bn.

Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the trade deficit swelling to $50.3bn in July. President Donald Trump has defended the duties on steel, aluminium imports and a range of Chinese goods as necessary to protect American industries from what he says is unfair foreign competitio­n.

The administra­tion said eliminatin­g the trade deficit would put the economy on a sustainabl­e path of faster growth, an argument that has been dismissed by economists as flawed given constraint­s such as low productivi­ty and slow population growth.

The US and China have slapped retaliator­y tariffs on a combined $100bn of products since early July, with more in the pipeline, posing risks to domestic and global economic growth.

The trade gap narrowed in April and May as farmers frontloade­d soya beans to China before Beijing’s retaliator­y tariffs came into effect in early July.

US financial markets were little moved by the data. The deteriorat­ion in the trade deficit was flagged in an advance report published in August.

When adjusted for inflation, the trade gap increased to a fivemonth high of $82.5bn in July from $79.3bn in June. July’s socalled real trade deficit is above the second-quarter average of $77.5bn. If that trend continues in August and September, trade could subtract from third-quarter gross domestic growth. Trade contribute­d 1.17 percentage points to the economy’s 4.2% annualised growth pace in the second quarter, almost double the 2.2% rate notched in the January-March period. The goods trade deficit with China surged 10% to a record $36.8bn in July. The trade gap with Mexico narrowed 25.3% to $5.5bn while the shortfall with Canada shot up 57.6% to $3.1bn.

The trade deficit with the EU soared 50% to a record high of $17.6bn.

In July, exports of goods and services fell 1.0% to $211.1bn. Soya bean exports dropped $0.7bn and shipments of civilian aircraft decreased $1.6bn. Petroleum exports, however, were the highest on record.

Imports of goods and services increased 0.9% to a record $261.2bn in July. They were boosted by imports of computers and computer accessorie­s.

The import bill was also inflated by petroleum imports, which were the highest since December 2014. There were also increases in imports of vehicles and parts.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Mind the gap: Donald Trump’s administra­tion says eliminatin­g the trade deficit will put the US on a path of growth, but in July economists forecast a growing deficit.
/Reuters Mind the gap: Donald Trump’s administra­tion says eliminatin­g the trade deficit will put the US on a path of growth, but in July economists forecast a growing deficit.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa