The nation's trade deficit continued to widen in September, to $54.0
billion vs $53.3 and $50.0 billion in the prior two months. September
was actually a good month for exports, jumping 1.5 percent to $212.6
billion in a gain, however, offset by a 1.5 percent increase in imports
to $266.6 billion.
First the good news and that's a strong
showing for aircraft exports that lifted capital goods by $1.1 billion
to $47.5 billion in the month. Exports of industrial supplies were also
strong, up $2.8 billion to $46.9 billion. These gains helped offset a
sharp $1.0 billion decline in food exports to $11.0 billion in what may
likely reflect early tariff effects.
Now the news on imports
where consumer goods rose $2.0 billion in the month to $55.4 billion in
what highlights the center of the trade controversy. Imports of capital
goods were also higher, up $2.4 billion to $60.1 billion, but imports
here point to solid business investment which will help the nation's
productivity.
Looking at unadjusted data by nation, the trade
deficit with China widened to $40.2 billion in September from an already
steep $38.6 billion in August. The gaps with all other leading trading
partners narrowed in the month especially with the EU, down to $10.6
billion from $15.7 billion.
Going into what looks like building
drama for trade talks, the nation's trade deficit was going in the wrong
direction. Net exports proved very weak in the third quarter with the
outlook for the fourth quarter uncertain.
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