US trade deficit narrows in June as imports decline

    • The trade deficit contracted 4.1 per cent to US$65.5 billion, the Commerce Department says.
    • The trade deficit contracted 4.1 per cent to US$65.5 billion, the Commerce Department says. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Tue, Aug 8, 2023 · 08:56 PM

    THE US trade deficit narrowed in June on a bigger pullback in imports than exports, according to government data released on Tuesday (Aug 8).

    The overall trade gap came in at US$65.5 billion in June, down from a revised US$68.3 billion figure in May, Commerce Department data showed.

    This came as exports fell by US$0.3 billion to US$247.5 billion, while imports dropped US$3.1 billion to US$313.0 billion.

    While stronger-than-expected consumer spending has helped to boost US trade, analysts have noted that this could weaken going forward.

    “Overall, trade flows continued to slow in the second quarter, both imports and exports,” said economist Rubeela Farooqi of High Frequency Economics.

    “A weaker trend could persist, owing to the effects of monetary policy tightening globally, which is likely to slow demand and economic activity domestically and abroad,” she added.

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    To rein in surging inflation, central banks including the US Federal Reserve have been lifting interest rates rapidly to tamp down consumer demand.

    In June, imports of goods ranging from computers to industrial supplies declined, Commerce Department data showed.

    The goods trade deficit with China declined to US$22.8 billion, on a bigger drop in imports than exports.

    “Net trade was a huge swing factor in GDP growth last year, but we see few signs of another blowout in the trade deficit this year,” said economists Ian Shepherdson and Kieran Clancy of Pantheon Macroeconomics in a recent report.

    Trade has been a swing factor since the Covid-19 outbreak. The US trade gap widened to a record in 2022 on a surge in goods imports, ranging from crude oil to consumer items such as pharmaceuticals and household products. AFP

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