Trade gap widens more than expected to $54.9 billion

FAN Editor

A cargo ship is guided into the Port of Oakland by a pair of tug boats.

Tim Rue | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The U.S. trade deficit widened more than expected in August thanks in part to a record level of imports of consumer goods and as a fresh round of tariffs loom against China and the European Union.

The imbalance stood at $54.9 billion at the end of the month, more than the $54.5 billion projected by economists surveyed by Dow Jones and up from $54 billion in July.

Imports rose to $262.8 billion against estimates of $261.4 billion, while exports increased to $207.9 billion, which also beat expectations of $207.4 billion.

Consumer goods imports hit $57.2 billion, a reflection of increased demand as a healthy shopping appetite helps keep the U.S. economy afloat amid fears of a slowdown.

Even as the overall deficit rose, the gap with China declined sharply, falling 3.1% for the month. On a year-over-year basis, the shortfall with China is $231.6 billion, an 11.4% decline from the same period in 2018.

The deficit with Germany swelled to $7.1 billion, the highest on record thanks to $12.1 billion of imports, also a record.
With additional tariffs about to take effect against the European Union, the trade gap also closed across much the region.

The EU deficit fell 23.7% from August though it is up 8.1% from a year ago. The U.S. also is threatening to levy duties against the $300 billion of Chinese goods not already subject to tariffs.

On a goods basis, auto exports grew $14.3 billion and hit their highest level since July 2014. The petroleum deficit of $300 million was the lowest on record.

Exports of capital goods, though, hit $44.3 billion, the lowest since October 2017.

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

US job growth slows in September, as unemployment falls to lowest since 1969

Wall Street Journal senior editor Jon Hilsenrath discusses the Federal Reserve’s likely response to September jobs numbers. Unemployment dropped to a 50-year low in September, even as job growth remained sluggish, with businesses adding just 136,000 workers. Continue Reading Below While the jobless rate fell by 0.2 percentage point to 3.5 percent, the […]

You May Like