Colombias trade deficit reached $1.24 billion in February 2025, up 63% from $762 million in the same month last year, according to data from the National Administrative Department of Statistics (DANE).The gap reflects a 0.8% annual drop in exports to $3.78 billion and a 9.1% surge in imports to $5.3 billion.
Over January-February 2025, the cumulative deficit hit $2.52 billion, a 36.5% increase from early 2024.Export declines centered on coal and petroleum products, with fuel sector shipments falling 17.5% by value.
This outweighed growth in agricultural goods like coffee (up 68%) and gold (up 38%).
Non-mining exports now represent 60% of total shipments, up from 53% in 2024.The United States remains Colombias top trade partner, absorbing 28.8% of exports, though China has become the largest import source, driving a bilateral deficit of $1.24 billion in January 2025 alone.Imports climbed to $5.38 billion in January 2025, led by manufactured goods (74% of purchases) and agricultural products.
The shift toward Chinese electronics and machinery contributed to a 27% annual rise in imports from China.Colombias Trade Deficit Widens in February 2025 Amid Shifting Export-Import Dynamics.
(Photo Internet reproduction)Regional trade provided partial relief, with surpluses of $108 million with Ecuador and $55 million with Venezuela.
Structural challenges persist as Colombias extractive industries face declining global prices and production.Colombias Trade Outlook 2025Fuel exports fell 10.5% in February despite stable oil prices.
Meanwhile, domestic demand for foreign goods grew 8.5% year-over-year, outpacing the 1.7% expansion in non-mining exports.Analysts note the agricultural sectors 29.5% growth in early 2025 signals diversification potential but remains insufficient to offset broader imbalances.The deficit aligns with OECD projections of 2.8% GDP growth for Colombia in 2025, highlighting reliance on consumption-driven expansion.
With manufacturing imports dominating and key exports remaining volatile, policymakers are under pressure to stabilize trade flows.They aim to achieve this through industrial upgrades and targeted export incentives.
Market observers caution that sustained deficits could test Colombias current account resilience if commodity markets weaken further.
Music
Trailers
DailyVideos
India
Pakistan
Afghanistan
Bangladesh
Srilanka
Nepal
Thailand
StockMarket
Business
Technology
Startup
Trending Videos
Coupons
Football
Search
Download App in Playstore
Download App
Best Collections