
The U.S.
Department of Commerce reported a $147.9 billion goods trade deficit for February 2025, showing a $7.7 billion decrease from Januarys figures.Market analysts had predicted a much smaller deficit of $134.5 billion.
February exports reached $178.6 billion while imports totaled $326.5 billion.
This modest improvement follows Januarys record-breaking deficit that shocked economists.Companies had rushed to import goods before Trumps promised tariffs began.
The January deficit surged by $33 billion month-over-month, far exceeding the previous record jump of $15 billion in March 2022.President Trump has implemented sweeping tariff increases since returning to office.
New duties include 25% on Canadian and Mexican goods, 20% on Chinese imports, and additional steel and aluminum tariffs.Trading partners have already announced retaliatory measures against American exports.
Trump promised voters he would fix trade imbalances.
The data shows mixed results so far.U.S.
Trade Deficit Narrows to $147.9 Billion, Still Above Market Expectations.
(Photo Internet reproduction)US Trade Deficit TrendsDuring his first term, the total deficit actually grew from $481 billion to $679 billion.
Recent years saw the gap widen further, reaching $1,030 billion in 2023 before slightly decreasing to $918 billion in 2024.China remains Americas largest deficit partner at $29.7 billion in January.
The European Union follows at $25.5 billion, with Switzerland surprisingly reaching $22.8 billion.
Mexico, Vietnam, and Canada round out the top trading imbalances.Economists point to deeper structural issues beyond tariffs.
Strong American consumer spending, low savings rates, and the powerful dollar drive the persistent deficit.
The federal budget deficit also contributes significantly to trade imbalances.The February narrowing may prevent a sharp economic slowdown.
Analysts had downgraded first-quarter GDP growth projections to below 1% after Januarys record deficit.
The economy had expanded at 2.4% in late 2024.Business leaders now watch anxiously as trade tensions escalate.
Many have already shifted supply chains to avoid tariffs.
Trump continues to threaten additional duties if trading partners coordinate retaliatory actions against the United States.
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