Going into the accelerated trade tensions of August and before the
US-China tariff hikes of September, US trade was improving, at least
slightly. July's trade deficit came in at $54.0 billion which is well
down from June's revised $55.5 billion total but still marginally over
the $53.9 billion monthly average of the second quarter. This comparison
gets net exports off to a slow start for third-quarter GDP.
The
bilateral goods deficit with China rose sharply in July, to an
unadjusted $32.8 billion from June's $30.0 billion reflecting a fall in
exports and a rise in imports. Yet year-to-date (which helps smooth
unadjusted data), this deficit is down, at $196.8 billion versus $222.6
billion this time in 2018. This is a positive for 2019 GDP.
Total
international trade has been depressed for the US this year as it has
been for many of the global economies. US exports are down 0.6 percent
from July last year for the fourth month of year-on-year contraction in
what is the worst run for this reading in three years. Imports, up 0.1
percent, continue to skirt the year-on-year zero line.
Gains in
July exports were led by consumer goods and included gains for autos and
capital goods. Exports of foods, feeds & beverages were lower for
2.2 percent year-on-year contraction. Imports show a sharp drop for
capital goods while imports of foods rose as they did for autos and also
consumer goods.
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