Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

March trade gap at record $110M

U.S. firms’ dependence sends imports to all-time high

- ANA MONTEIRO

The U.S. trade deficit widened to a record in March, reflecting a surge in imports as companies relied on foreign producers to meet solid domestic demand.

The gap in goods and services trade grew 22.3% to $109.8 billion, Commerce Department data showed Wednesday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a $107.1 billion deficit. The figures aren’t adjusted for inflation.

In the first quarter, the widening of the trade deficit largely explains the economy’s worst performanc­e since the pandemic recovery, with gross domestic product shrinking at a 1.4% annual pace. That’s because the value of products American businesses and consumers bought from overseas outpaced purchases of U.S. goods and services by other economies.

Net exports subtracted 3.2 percentage points from firstquart­er GDP, government figures showed last week.

An improvemen­t in the trade shortfall any time soon will be difficult as U.S. demand exceeds economic activity in many other nations. Severe lockdowns in China to curb the spread of covid-19 further complicate­s the trade picture.

Activity at some ports slowed sharply, further straining already-tenuous global supply chains.

The value of imports of goods and services rose 10.3% in March to $351.5 billion and exports increased 5.6% to $241.7 billion. Both values were records.

U.S. merchandis­e imports grew 12% to a record $298.8 billion, reflecting a surge in the value of industrial supplies that include petroleum. Energy prices rallied in the month after Russia’s invasion

of Ukraine. Imports of consumer goods, capital equipment and automobile­s also increased.

On an inflation-adjusted basis, the March merchandis­e-trade deficit widened 18.9% to a record $137.8 billion.

Digging deeper:

■ The nominal merchandis­e-trade deficit widened to $128.1 billion.

■ Travel exports — or spending by visitors to the U.S. — rose slightly to $8.4 billion.

■ Travel imports, a measure of Americans traveling abroad, climbed to $7.5 billion, the highest since the start of the pandemic.

■ Petroleum imports increased to $24.8 billion, the highest since 2014.

■ Value of imported industrial supplies rose to the highest since 2008, capital goods reached a record.

 ?? (Bloomberg News WPNS/Bing Guan) ?? Trucks enter and exit the Port of Los Angeles in this file photo. The U.S. trade deficit rose in March to a record $109.8 billion.
(Bloomberg News WPNS/Bing Guan) Trucks enter and exit the Port of Los Angeles in this file photo. The U.S. trade deficit rose in March to a record $109.8 billion.

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