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A U.S. soybean producer prepares a shipment to Canada.
MPR Photo/Dan Gunderson
The U.S. trade deficit plunged in January to
the lowest level in six years as a deepening recession cut demand
for imported goods.
The Commerce Department said Friday the trade imbalance dropped
to $36 billion in January, a decline of 9.7 percent from December
and the lowest level since October 2002.
The improvement was better than the $38 billion deficit that
economists had expected and reflected the fact that crude oil
imports dropped to the lowest point in three years and demand for a
wide variety of other foreign goods from autos to heavy machinery
and household appliances declined.
America's deficit with many of its trading partners declined
sharply although the politically sensitive imbalance with China
bucked the downward trend, rising by 3.5 percent to $20.6 billion.
American exports to China plunged by 19.7 percent, a much bigger
drop than the 1.3 percent decline in Chinese goods shipped to the
United States.
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The January deficit of $36 billion, if it continued for the
entire year, would result in a deficit of $432 billion for 2010, a
drop of 36.5 percent from the $681.1 billion deficit recorded in
2008. That deficit represented a 2.7 percent drop from 2007, the
first year that the trade gap had narrowed after setting records
for five straight years.
Many economists believe the improvement for this year will be
sizable as the country's most severe recession in decades trims
Americans' appetite for foreign goods.
U.S. exports are also falling as the recession that began in the
United States spreads worldwide. However, so far, the drop in
imports is larger than the fall in exports, reflecting in large
part the fact that oil prices have plummeted from the record levels
they hit last year.
The trade deficit has now declined for a record sixth straight
month, beating the prior record for declines of five straight drops
set in 2007.
For January, exports of goods and services dropped by 5.7
percent to $124.9 billion, the lowest level since September 2006.
Demand for a wide variety of U.S.-made products from farm goods to
autos to civilian aircraft all dropped in January.
Imports fell even more sharply, declining by 6.7 percent to
$160.9 billion, the lowest level for imported goods since March
2005. The decline in imports was led by a 25.2 percent drop in
imported crude oil, which fell to $11.9 billion in January, the
lowest level since February 2005. The average price for a barrel of
crude dropped to $39.81, also the lowest point since February 2005.
While exports have not fallen as sharply as imports, the
declines that have occurred have pinched U.S. companies.
Boeing Co. and Caterpillar Inc., two of America's largest
exporters, have already announced layoffs due to falling demand for
their products in key export markets.
Many economists are worried that the spreading global economic
weakness could prompt countries to resort to raising protectionist
barriers in an effort to protect their domestic industries.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner was meeting in Britain on
Friday finance ministers from the Group of 20 countries, which
include the world's wealthiest economies and major developing
countries such as China, Brazil and India. The Obama administration
is pushing the G-20 nations to adopt sizable economic stimulus
programs to jump-start their stalled economies. The U.S. Congress
recently passed a $787 billion stimulus package that had been
pushed by President Barack Obama.
Former Dallas mayor Ron Kirk, tapped by Obama to be the nation's
top trade official, told the Senate Finance Committee at his
confirmation hearing on Monday that his main objective as U.S.
trade representative would be to enforce existing law and insist
that U.S. trade partners play by the rules.
(Copyright 2009 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
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A U.S. soybean producer prepares a shipment to Canada.
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