US Trade Deficit Falls to $74 Billion in October
Total deficit so far this year is up by more than 12 percent compared to 2023.
America’s trade deficit dipped in October from the previous month, with imports and exports falling more than usual, according to recent government data.
The big dip in imports came after buyers increased their purchases in September, according to a Dec. 5 post from accounting company KPMG.
“Manufacturers and retailers were stocking up to hedge against the threat of a port strike on the East Coast and to avoid another round of tariffs levied on China,” KPMG stated.
The decline of four percent was also the fourth largest drop in imports since the end of the 2007–08 Great Financial Crisis, according to KPMG.
Major import declines were seen in goods like computers, semiconductors, crude oil, pharmaceutical preparations, and automotive vehicles, parts, and engines.
Meanwhile, the 1.6 percent dip in exports was the “largest decline in eight months,” KPMG said. “Soft growth among the main U.S. trading partners and the strong dollar are to blame.”
Goods like computer accessories, passenger cars, industrial supplies and materials, consumer goods, and trucks, buses, and special-purpose vehicles saw a dip in exports.
Overall, the $73.8 billion trade deficit was higher than expected, the accounting company said.
“The trade deficit with the European Union improved by $6.7 billion, far and away the biggest advance since the data has been collected and due almost entirely to fewer imports. The deficit with China fell following last month’s scramble to avoid new tariffs,” it noted.
Canada, China, and Mexico make up key trade partners, with all three nations ranking among the top import source and export markets for the United States.
Tariffs and Trade Deficit
The year-over-year jump in trade deficit comes as President-elect Donald Trump has proposed a series of tariffs once he enters the White House.
It pointed out that America’s trade deficit has been widening over the past several years, especially since the COVID-19 pandemic.
He also vowed to impose an additional 10 percent tariff on Chinese imports, over and above other tariffs, citing the failure of the communist regime to tackle fentanyl flows into the United States.
Some have warned against imposing such measures. California Gov. Gavin Newsom recently said during a press conference that the president-elect’s proposed tariffs would lead to prices of food, gas, oil, and other commodities rising.
“This is a regressive tax that will have a profound impact on progress and momentum that we’re starting to enjoy,” Newsom said.
Karoline Leavitt, the Trump-Vance transition spokeswoman, dismissed such concerns. “In his first term, President Trump instituted tariffs against China that created jobs, spurred investment, and resulted in no inflation,” she said to The Epoch Times.
While the trade deficit affects several sectors, agriculture is a key issue. In March, a group of Senate Republicans asked the federal government to tackle the agricultural trade deficit America is facing.
“This decline is unsustainable, and we urge the Biden administration to immediately take action to improve the competitiveness of U.S. agricultural products abroad and reverse this trend.”