US Trade Balance Is Deteriorating, Despite Record Exports

The US trade deficit swelled in December, and the $53.1 bln shortfall was a bit larger than expected. It was the largest deficit since October 2008.  For the 2017, the US recorded a trade deficit of goods and services of $566 bln, the largest since 2008.  

The deterioration of the trade balance may be worse than it appears. There has been significant improvement in the oil trade balance. In 2017, the real petroleum balance was just shy of $96 bln, the smallest in 14 years. The non-oil goods deficit of almost $740.7 bln was a new record.  

Exports rose 1.8% in December to $203.35 bln. This is a record. There was a record shipment of capital goods, and increases in industrial supplies and materials. Exports rose 7.3% in 2017. Imports rose 2.5% in December to a record $256.5 bln. Imports rose 9.5% in 2017. There were record purchases of foreign produced consumer goods and capital goods. 

Trade is a central issue for the Trump Administration. It argues that the chronic trade deficit is a function of bad trade deals and other countries taking advantage of the US. Tariffs and quotas were recently levied on solar panels and washing machines. Additional action may be pending on steel, aluminum and intellectual property rights.   

The Trump Administration seems particularly sensitive to trade patterns with China and Mexico. The goods deficit with China widened 8.1% last year to a record $375.2 bln. The goods deficit with Mexico increased by 10% to $71.1 bln, the most in a decade. What the net figures conceal is that the US merchandise exports to both China and Mexico were records. Imports from Mexico and China were also records.  

Net exports were estimated to have subtracted 1.1 percentage points from Q4 GDP, and the risk is that it was a slightly larger drag. When adjusted for inflation, the real goods deficit widened to $68.4 bln from $66.5 bln in November.   

McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) published a report last year on manufacturing. The report noted that only 1% of US companies export, making a shallow base. Moreover, MGI argued that the US manufacturing sector has been starved for investment. Private sector investment in US manufacturing was estimated to be near 30-year lows. The average age of US factories is 25 years, while average age of equipment is around nine years.    

MGI argued that it would cost $115 bln a year for a decade to fix the situation. The combination of tax cuts and liberalized depreciation rules are thought to help facilitate new private investment. However, companies did not lack for resources and the price and access to capital did not seem to be the main obstacle in the first place. 

Read more by Marc on his site Marc to Market.

Disclaimer: Opinions expressed are solely of the author’s, based on current ...

more
How did you like this article? Let us know so we can better customize your reading experience.

Comments

Leave a comment to automatically be entered into our contest to win a free Echo Show.
Gary Anderson 6 years ago Contributor's comment

Companies just don't want to expand capacity for production, Marc.