US trade deficit hits a record high amid pent-up demand
The US trade deficit jumped to a record high in March amid roaring domestic demand, which is drawing in imports, and the gap could widen further as the nation's economic activity rebounds faster than its global rivals.
The White House's $1.9t pandemic relief package and the expansion of the Covid-19 vaccination program to all adult Americans have led to a boom in demand, which is pushing against supply constraints.
Economic activity is also being boosted by the Federal Reserve's ultra-easy monetary policy stance.
Manufacturers lack the capacity to satisfy the surge in demand and inventories are very lean, forcing businesses to import more goods.
Demand during the pandemic also shifted to goods from services, with Americans cooped up at home.
The trade deficit increased 5.6 per cent to an all-time high of $74.4b in March, the Commerce Department said on Tuesday. The trade gap was in line with economists' expectations.
Imports soared 6.3 per cent to record high $274.5b in March.
Goods imports shot up 7.0 per cent to $234.4b, also a record high. Imports of consumer goods were the highest on record, as were those for food and capital goods.
The nation imported a range of goods including apparel, furniture, toys, semiconductors, motor vehicles, petroleum products and telecommunications equipment.
But imports of civilian aircraft and cellphones fell.
Exports surged 6.6 per cent to $200.0b. Exports of goods vaulted 8.9 per cent to $142.9b. They were led by industrial supplies and materials, capital and consumer goods.
The pandemic remained a drag on services exports, especially travel. At $17.1b in March, the services surplus was the smallest since August 2012.
When adjusted for inflation, the goods trade deficit surged $4.2b to a record $103.1b in March. The deterioration in the trade deficit was flagged in an advance report published last week.
US stocks opened lower. The dollar was trading higher against a basket of currencies. US Treasury prices rose.
Despite the wider trade deficit, the economy grew at a 6.4 per cent annualized rate in the first quarter, the second-fastest gross domestic product growth pace since the third quarter of 2003, fueled by pent-up domestic demand. That followed a 4.3 per cent growth pace in the fourth quarter.
Most economists expect double-digit GDP growth this quarter, which would position the economy to achieve growth of at least 7 per cent, which would be the fastest since 1984. The economy contracted 3.5 per cent in 2020, its worst performance in 74 years.
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