Baltimore Sun

US trade deficit shrinks to $52.5B in Sept.

Report points to 1st surplus of petroleum in over 4 decades

- By Martin Crutsinger

WASHINGTON — The U.S. trade deficit fell in September to the lowest level in five months as imports dropped more sharply than exports and America ran a rare surplus in petroleum.

The Commerce Department said Tuesday that the September gap between what the United States buys from abroad and what it sells shrank by 4.7% to $52.5 billion. That was down from the August deficit of $55 billion and was the smallest imbalance since April.

The deficit with China fell 0.6% to $31.6 billion.

President Donald Trump has imposed tariffs on more than $360 billion in Chinese imports. China has retaliated with its own tariffs on U.S. products as the world’s two largest economies have engaged in a trade war that has rattled global financial markets and slowed economic growth.

The September deficit showed that exports fell 0.9% to $206 billion, while imports dropped even faster — 1.7% to $258.4 billion. For the first nine months of this year, the U.S. deficit is running 5.4% below the same period a year ago. The deficit for all of 2018 totaled $627.7 billion.

Economists said they expect the trade deficit will be a drag on growth in the current October-December quarter as the continued weakness of the global economy further depresses demand for American exports.

“It’s hard to see anything other than further weakness in exports over the coming months,” said Andrew Hunter, senior U.S. economist at Capital Economics.

This year, the deficit with China is 12.8% lower than the same period a year ago although it remains the largest imbalance America runs with any country.

The countries are trying to complete a phase one trade deal that would deal with some of the administra­tion’s complaints that China is stealing U.S. technology and pursuing other unfair trade practices.

Investors are hoping that a phase one agreement will halt the imposition of any further tariffs. Those tariffs have disrupted global supply chains and caused businesses to pull back on their investment spending, resulting in slower economic growth in the

U.S. and other countries.

Beijing has been stepping up its demands for relief from existing tariffs on about $360 billion in Chinese imports as a requiremen­t of a partial trade deal, according to officials familiar with the negotiatio­ns.

On Tuesday, Chinese President Xi Jinping promised more gradual market-opening steps at the start of an import fair but did not mention initiative­s on technology policy and other irritants that initially sparked a tariff war with Washington.

The September trade report showed that the U.S. ran the first surplus in petroleum in more than four decades, according to government records that go back to 1978.

The $252 million surplus reflected the United States exported $15 billion in petroleum products in September while importing $14.7 billion. U.S. petroleum exports have been growing in recent years, reflecting a boom in new production methods such as fracking.

In addition to sparring with China, Trump has imposed import taxes on foreign steel and aluminum and is threatenin­g to tax imported autos. Trump views America’s trade deficits as a sign of economic weakness and the result of unfair trade agreements.

But economists say the trade gap is a product of economic forces that don’t respond much to changes in trade policy such as a strong dollar, which makes U.S. goods more expensive on overseas markets, and that Americans consume more than they produce.

In September, the U.S. recorded a $71.7 billion deficit in the trade of goods such as cars and appliances. But it ran a $19.3 billion surplus in the trade of services such as banking and education.

Bloomberg News contribute­d.

 ?? TED S. WARREN/AP ?? Farm and constructi­on equipment are prepped Tuesday to be exported to Asia from the Port of Tacoma in Washington state. U.S. exports fell to $206 billion in September.
TED S. WARREN/AP Farm and constructi­on equipment are prepped Tuesday to be exported to Asia from the Port of Tacoma in Washington state. U.S. exports fell to $206 billion in September.

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