The U.S. trade deficit fell by 7.5% in June after a partial rebound
in exports, but the flow of cross-border transactions remained
depressed by the global coronavirus pandemic and are still a sore spot
for the economy.
The trade gap shrank to $50.7 billion in June from $54.8
billion in the prior month, the U.S. Census Bureau said Wednesday. That
was in line with the forecast of economists polled by MarketWatch.
A smaller deficit is normally a
good thing because it adds to gross domestic product, the official
scorecard for the U.S. economy. Yet both imports and exports are well
below year-ago levels, reflecting reduced demand by American consumers
hurt by the pandemic as well as a smalller appetite by other countries
for U.S. goods and services.
Last week, the U.S. government said GDP declined at a nearly
33% annual pace in the second quarter, marking the biggest decline on
record.
Even after the increase, however, exports were almost 16% off last year’s pace.
Imports rose a smaller 4.7%. The U.S. took in more foreign-made
autos, cell phones and computers, but imports of industrial supplies
fell sharply.
Imports were 14.2% below last year’s level.
The deficit in goods with China fell slightly to a seasonally adjusted $26.7 billion in June.
The gap with China in the first six months of 2020 declined to
$142.2 billion from $183.2 billion in the first half of 2019, reflecting
ongoing trade tensions with the U.S. as well as the impact from the
virus.
The U.S. imposed a variety of tariffs on China before the
outbreak and many of them remain in place. Yet instead of the overall
deficit declining, the U.S. has replaced Chinese imports with imports
from other countries.
No comments:
Post a Comment