1/6/17, "U.S. Trade Gap Widened in November," Wall St. Journal, Jeffrey Sparshott and Eric Morath
"Exports fell 0.2% from the prior month while imports climbed 1.1%."
The trade gap for goods and services increased 6.8% from a month earlier to a seasonally adjusted $45.24 billion in November, the Commerce Department said Friday. That took the monthly deficit to its highest level since February.
Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had expected a November trade deficit of $45.6 billion.
Exports fell 0.2% from the prior month while imports climbed 1.1%.
U.S.
exports rose to the highest level in more than a year in September,
buoyed by surging sales of soybeans and other goods. That proved
unsustainable. Meanwhile, the dollar has strengthened, making U.S. goods
and services more expensive overseas and foreign products cheaper here.
In November, imports of all goods rose to the highest level since
August 2015. Exports of capital goods--engines, computers, bulldozers
and the like--fell to the lowest level since September 2011.
In a reflection of rising oil prices and volumes, both petroleum imports and exports were the highest since the summer of 2015....
Forecasting
firm Macroeconomic Advisers on Wednesday said it expects GDP to expand
at a 2.2% pace to end the year, a marked slowdown from the third
quarter.
President-elect Donald Trump made trade and trade
agreements central issues during his campaign. Mr. Trump, who will take
office later this month, has repeatedly criticized free-trade deals and
U.S. companies that relocate operations overseas with the goal of
shipping goods back to the U.S."
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