The numbers: The trade deficit fell sharply in November
for the second month in a row and sank to the lowest level in three
years, reflecting a decline in Chinese imports and the reemergence of
the U.S. as an energy superpower
The trade gap dropped 8.2% to $43.1 billion in November, the
government said Tuesday, basically matching the MarketWatch forecast.
It’s the smallest deficit since October 2016.
Most of the decline
recently has been tied to a shrinking deficit with China, whose imports
have fallen in the face off stiff U.S. tariffs. Surging U.S. oil
exports were another contributor.
If the gap remains around the
same size in December, the U.S. could post the first annual decline in
its trade deficit in 2019 in six years.
What happened:
Exports rose 0.7% to $208.6 billion in November. The U.S. exported more
aircraft engines, autos and equipment for oil drilling and exploration.
Imports slipped 1% to $251.7 billion. The U.S. imported fewer
computers, cell phones, drugs and aircraft, offsetting a big increase in
auto imports.
The deficit in goods with China fell another $2.2 billion in November to $25.6 billion.
The gap with China has tumbled $61.3 billion to $319.8 billion in the first 11 months of 2019 compared to the prior year.
What’s
unclear is whether the gap will continue to shrink or by how much. Most
of the decline in the past several months may reflect short-term
disruptions caused by the trade war as companies sought to time orders
around new tariffs.
Still, a sharp decline in the U.S. trade gap
with China suddenly has the U.S. on the verge of posting its first
annual decline since 2013.
The U.S. trade deficit added up to
$563 billion in the first nine months of this year, compared to $566.9
billion in the same span in 2018.
What’s also helped tug the
deficit lower are growing U.S. exports of oil and natural gas. The U.S.
petroleum surplus in November rose to $800 million and was the highest
on record.
Imports of crude oil, meanwhile, fell to the lowest level in almost 28 years.
The big picture:
The U.S. and China next week are expected to sign the first phase of
what they hope will be a broader trade deal, but experts warn the most
contentious disputes will be harder to resolve. They say the trade
impasse could drag on for months if not years.
Yet leaders of the
world’s two largest economies seem intent of putting the dispute on the
back burner, at least for now, after a broad slowdown in global growth.
A flareup in tensions last summer damaged the economies of both
countries and contributed to a worldwide slump in manufacturing.
In
any case, large U.S. trade deficits have persisted for years and are
unlikely to go away. Even as the gap with China has shrunk, it’s widened
with other countries such as Mexico and Taiwan.
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