US goods trade deficit narrows sharply in June
The goods trade gap narrowed 10.8 per cent to US$86.0 billion last month
[WASHINGTON] The US trade deficit in goods contracted sharply in June amid a decline in imports, cementing economists’ expectations that trade likely accounted for much of an anticipated rebound in economic growth in the second quarter.
The goods trade gap narrowed 10.8 per cent to US$86.0 billion last month, the Commerce Department’s Census Bureau said on Tuesday (Jul 29). Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the goods trade deficit rising to US$98.20 billion.
Imports of goods decreased US$11.5 billion to US$264.2 billion. Goods exports slipped US$1.1 billion to US$178.2 billion.
A flood of imports as businesses rushed to beat higher prices from tariffs on foreign merchandise helped to send gross domestic product declining at a 0.5 per cent annualised rate in the January-March quarter. The trade deficit sliced off a record 4.61 percentage points from GDP in the January-March quarter.
A sharp reversal is expected in the second quarter, though some of the boost to GDP was likely partially offset by businesses drawing down on some of the imports, which had landed in warehouses as inventory.
The government is scheduled to publish its advance estimate of second-quarter GDP on Wednesday. A Reuters survey of economists forecast economic growth rebounded at a 2.4 per cent rate in the April-June quarter. REUTERS
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