• About

RealityChek

~ So Much Nonsense Out There, So Little Time….

Tag Archives: Advanced Technology Products

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: A Deceptively Calm January for U.S. Trade?

09 Thursday Mar 2023

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, ATP, Biden, Buy American, Canada, CCP Virus, China, Donald Trump, European Union, exports, Federal Reserve, goods trade, imports, India, Inflation Reduction Act, infrastructure, Japan, Made in Washington trade flows, manufacturing, monetary policy, non-oil goods trade, semiconductors, services trade, stimulus, Taiwan, tariffs, Trade, trade deficit, Ukraine War, Zero Covid, {What's Left of) Our Economy

Pretty calm on the surface, pretty turbulent underneath. That’s a good way to look at yesterday’s official release of the U.S. trade figures for January. Many of the broadest trade balance figures moved little from their December levels, but the details revealed many multi-month and even multi-year highs, lows, and changes – along with one all-time high (the goods deficit with India).

The combined goods and services deficit most strongly conveyed the impression of relatively calm trade waters. It rose sequentially for the second straight month, but only by 1.61 percent, from a downwardly revised $67.21 billion to $68.29 billion.

The trade shortfall in goods narrowed, but by even less – 0.69 percent, from an upwardly revised $90.71 billion to $90.09 billion.

More volatility was displayed by the services trade surplus. It sank for the first time in two months, from upwardly revised $23.50 billion (its highest monthly total since December, 2019’s $24.56 billion – just before the CCP Virs’ arrival stateside) to $21.80 billion. Moreover, this shrinkage (7.26 percent) was the greatest since last May’s 11.05 percent.

Meanwhile, total U.S. exports in January expanded sequentially for the first time since August. And the the 3.41 percent rise, from a downwardly revised $249.00 billion to $257.50 billion was the biggest since April’s 3.62 percent.

Goods exports in January also registered their first monthly increase since August, with the 6.02 percent improvement (from a downwardly revised $167.69 billion to $177.79 billion) the biggest since October, 2021’s 9.09 percent.

Services exports dipped on month in January, from a downwardly revised $81.32 billion to $79.71 billion. And the 1.98 percent decrease was the biggest since last January’s 3.05 percent. But the December total was the highest on record, and the seventh straight all-time high over the preceding nine months, so January could be a mere bump in the services export recovery road.

On the import side, total U.S. purchases from abroad advanced for the second straight month in January, with the 3.03 percent increase (from a downwardly revised $316.21 billion to $325.79 billion standing as the biggest since last March’s 9.64 percent.

Goods imports were up, too – from a downwardly revised $258.40 billion to $267.88 billion. The climb was the second straight, too, and its 3.67 percent growth rate also the biggest since March (11.00 percent).

Services imports in January were up for the first time since September, but by a mere 0.17 percent, from a downwardly revised $57.81 billlion to $57.91 billion.

Also changing minimally in January – the non-oil goods deficit (which RealityChek regulars know can be considered the Made in Washington trade deficit, since non-oil goods are the trade flows most heavily influenced by U.S. trade agreements and other trade policy decision. The 0.32 percent month-to-month decline brought this trade shortfall from $91.97 billion to $91.68 billion.

Since Made in Washington trade is the closest global proxy to U.S.-China goods trade, comparing trends in the two can indicate the effectiveness of the Trump-Biden China tariffs, which cover hundreds of billions of dollars worth of Chinese products aimed at the U.S. maket.

In January, the huge, longstanding U.S. goods trade gap with China widened by 7.01 percent, from $23.51 billion to $25.16 billion. That third straight increase contrasts sharply with the small dip in the non-oil goods deficit – apparently strengthening the China tariffs critics’ case.

Yet on a January-January basis, the China deficit is down much more (30.82 percent) than its non-oil goods counterpart (14.07 percent). The discrepancy, moreover, looks too great to explain simply by citing China’s insanely over-the-top and economy-crushing Zero Covid policies. So the tariffs look to be significantly curbing U.S. China goods trade, too.

U.S. goods exports to China fell for the third straight month in January – by 5.05 percent, from $13.79 billion to $13.09 billion.

America’s goods imports from China increased in January for the second straight month – by 2.55 percent, from $37.30 billion to $38.25 billion.

Revealingly, however, on that longer-term January-to-January basis, these purchases are off by 20.50 percent (from $47.85 billion). The non-oil goods import figure has actually inched up by just 0.71 percent – which also strengthens the China tariffs case.

The even larger, and also longstanding, manufacturing trade deficit resumed worsened in January, rising for the first time in three months. The 2.83 percent sequential increase brought the figure from $113.61 billion – the lowest figure, though, since last February’s $106.49 billion.

Manufacturing exports declined by 3.01 percent, from $105.71 billion to $102.52 billion – the weakest such performance since last February’s $94.55 billion.

The much greater value of manufacturing imports rose fractionally, from $219.31 billlion to $219.36 billion – also near the lows of the past year.

In advanced technology products (ATP), the trade gap narrowed by 11.36 percent in January, from $18.45 billion to $16.35 billion. The contraction was the third in a row, and pushed this deficit down to its lowest level since last February’s $13.42 billion.

ATP exports were down 8.78 percent, from $35.16 billion to $32.07 billion – their lowest level since last May’s $31.25 billion. And ATP imports sank by 9.68 percent, from $53.60 billion to a $48.42 billion total that was the smallest since last February’s $42.44 billion.

Big January moves took place in U.S. goods trade with major foreign economies, though much of this commerce often varies wildly from month to month.

The goods deficit with Canada, America’s biggest trade partner, jumped by 39.02 percent on month in January, from $5.09 billion to $7.07 billion. The increase was the second straight, the new total the highest since last July’s $8.47 billion, and the growth rate the fastest since last March’s 47.61 percent.

But the goods shortfall with the European Union decreased by 10.83 percent, from $18.36 billion to $16.37 billion. The drop was the third straight, the new total the lowet since last September’s $14.44 billion, and the shrinkage the fastest since last July’s 19.97 percent.

For volatility, it’s tough to beat U.S. goods trade with Switzerland. In January, the deficit plummeted 42.07 percent, from $2.28 billion to $1.32 billion. But that nosedive followed a 77.84 percent surge in December and one of nearly 1,200 percent in November (from a $99.9 million level that was the lowest since May, 2014’s $45.3 million).

Also dramatically up and down have been the goods trade shortfalls with Japan and Taiwan. For the former, the deficit plunged by 30.33 percent in January – from $7.09 billion to $4.94 billion. But that drop followed a 20.58 percent increase in December to the highest level since April, 2019’s $7.35 billion.

The Taiwan goods deficit soared by 52.44 percent in January, from $2.80 billion to $3.68 billion. But this rise followed a 33.65 percent December drop that was the biggest since the 43.18 percent of February, 2020 – when the CCP Virus was shutting down the economy of China, a key link of the supply chains of many of the island’s export-oriented manufacturers.

Finally, the goods deficit with India skyrocketed by 106.55 percent in January, from $2.41 billion to that record $4.99 billion. That total surpassed the $4.44 billion shortfall the United States ran up with India last May, but the more-than-doubling was far from a record growth rate. That was achieved with a 146.76 percent burst in July, 2019.

Since the widely forecast upcoming U.S. recession seems likely to arrive later this year (assuming it arrives at all) than originally forecast, the trade deficit seems likely to continue increasing, too. But that outcome isn’t inevitable, as shown by the deficit’s shrinkage in the second half of last year, when America’s economic growth rebounded from a shallow recession.

The number of major wildcards out there remains sobering, too, ranging from the path of U.S. inflation and consequent Federal Reserve efforts to fight it by cooling off the economy, to levels of net government spending increases (including at state and local levels), to the strength or weakness of the U.S. dollar, to the pace of China’s economic reopening, to the course of the Ukraine War. 

On balance, though, I’ll stick with my deficit-increasing forecast, since (1) I’m still convinced that the approach of the next presidential election cycle will prevent any major Washington actors from taking any steps remotely likely to curb Americans’ borrowing and spending power significantly for very long; and (2) I’m skeptical that even the strong-sounding Buy American measures  instituted by the Biden administration (mainly in recently approved infrastructure programs and semiconductor industry revival plans, and in the green energy subsidies in the Inflation Reduction Act) will enable much more substitution of domestic manufactures for imports – least in the foreseeable future.          

Advertisement

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: 2022 Saw More U.S. Trade Deficits but More Secure Supply Chains

12 Sunday Feb 2023

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, ATP, Biden adminstration, Canada, Central America, Dominican Republic, European Union, friendshoring, Germany, Immigration, Japan, manufacturing, Mexico, offshoring, South Korea, supply chains, Taiwan, Trade, Trade Deficits, U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement, USMCA, Vietnam, {What's Left of) Our Economy

Sometimes the best-laid plans of mice and men etc etc. So this second look by RealityChek at the final (for now) year-end 2022 official U.S. trade figures is coming out today, rather than yesterday, as I expected.

The big takeaways: First, record deficits were set practically everywhere the eye can see – and on top of sizable increases – when it comes to trade flows in manufacturing, advanced technology products (ATP), and with nearly all of America’s major trade partners (except China, which was covered Friday).

Second, and more encouragingly, regionalization of U.S. trade within the Western Hemisphere kept growing, which is (a) surely making supply chains more secure; and (b) creating more economic opportunity in countries that have long sent the United States large numbers of migrants. In other words, the Biden administration goal of “friendshoring” keeps becoming a thing. 

The biggest absolute numbers were turned in by U.S. manufacturing, which saw its huge, chronic deficit rise by 13.46 percent, from $1.32544 trillion to a twelfth straight record $1.50379 trillion. (Unless otherwise specified, all figures in this post will be in pre-inflation dollars, which are the trade data most closely followed by students of the economy.)

And in context, these figures look just as bad. Although full-year, 2022 results won’t be available until late March, when the pre-inflation manufacturing output numbers come out, as of the third quarter, the manufacturing shortfall stood at 53.09 percent of its value-added production (a measure that avoids significant double counting for complex goods made up of lots of parts and components). That marks the first time this number has topped fifty percent.

Moreover, it could well climb further, since in inflation-adjusted terms, manufacturing output has weakened significantly in the fourth quarter.

The only remotely optimistic development: The growth rate of the manufacturing trade deficit last year slowed from 2021’s 18.84 percent.

The trade gap in advanced technology products widened even faster last year – by 24.58 percent, from $195.95 billion to a sixth consecutive all-time high $244.11 billion.

An even stronger goods trade deficit increase was registered by America’s partners in the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) – the successor to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). This shortfall worsened by 34.12 percent, from $158.19 billion to a second straight record .$212.17 billion.

The most dramatic USMCA deficit change came in U.S-Canada goods trade. Here, the gap soared by 63.14 percent, from $50.03 billion to $81.62 billion. That new record deficit was the highest since 2005’s $78.49 billion..

The goods trade deficit with Mexico surged more slowly – by 20.73 percent. But 2022’s $130.55 billion total was a new all-time high as well, surpassing 2020’s $112.08 billion.

American trade with the European Union (EU) was an exception to the 2022 pattern. The goods shortfall fell by 6.78 percent, from $218.74 billion to $203.91 billion, largely reflecting supercharged American exports of natural gas to the continent to make up for reduced post-Ukraine war Russian supplies.

But the goods deficit with the EU’s largest economy, Germany, increased by 5.44 percent, from $69.88 billion to $73.69 billion.

Turning to U.S. goods trade with Asia, the deficit with Japan grew by 12.80 percent on year, from $60.30 billion to $68.01 billion.

The gap with South Korea jumped by 51.39 percent, from $28.98 billion to a third straight record $43.87 billion.

In swelling by 19.65 percent, from $40.23 billion to $48.13 billion, the goods shortfall with Taiwan set recorded its fourth consecutive all-time high.

And consistent with its growing role as an alternative to offshoring export-oriented production to China, the U.S. goods deficit with Vietnam ballooned by 27.77 percent, setting a thirteenth straight record in the process.

At the same time, these geographic trade statistics show that despite the emergence of Asia altenatives to China, U.S. goods trade is becoming increasingly concentrated within the Western Hemisphere.

Between 2021 and 2022, two-way U.S. goods trade with Canada and Mexico combined as a share of total U.S. goods trade rose from 28.76 percent to 29.33 percent. And in 2019, the last full-year before the pandemic’s arrival state-side, this share was just 25.71 percent.

The numbers for Dominican Republic and Central America are much smaller but the trends more dramatic. Between 2021 and 2022, their share of total U.S. goods trade improved from 5.25 percent to 5.34 percent, but since 2019, it’s way up from 1.23 percent.   

 

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: Worsening U.S. Trade Deficits are Back for Now

06 Tuesday Dec 2022

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, CCP Virus, China, coronavirus, COVID 19, dollar, euro, Europe, exchange rates, exports, goods trade, imports, manufacturing, natural gas, non-oil goods, services trade, Trade, trade deficit, Wuhan virus, Zero Covid, {What's Left of) Our Economy

At least if you don’t factor in inflation, this morning’s official U.S. figures (for October) show that an encouraging recent winning streak for America’s trade flows and their impact on the economy has come to an end for now.

The winning streak consisted of overall monthly trade deficits that shrank sequentially from April through August, which means – according to how Washington and most economists calculate such things – that trade was contributing to the economy’s growth. And that five month stretch was the longest since the shortfall declined for six straight months between June and November, 2019.

Even better, this contribution translated into expansion that was healthier, fueled more by producing and less by borrowing and consuming. Better still, during the last part of this period, the deficit was falling while growth was taking place – as opposed to the more common pattern of a declining deficit limiting contraction mainly because a shriveling economy was buying fewer imports. And better still, for most of these months, the trade gap shrank both because exports climbed and imports dropped.

In October, however, the combined goods and services deficit rose for the second consecutive month, and by 5.44 percent, from an upwardly revised $74.13 billion to $78.16 billion. That total, moreover, was the highest since June’s $80.72 billion. And also for the second straight month – exports dipped and imports advanced.

That consecutive sequential export decrease was the first such stretch since the peak CCP Virus period of March thru May, 2020. The actual decline was 0.73 percent, from an upwardly revised $258.51 billion to $256.63 billion – a total that was the lowest since May’s $256.08 billion

The total import increase was also the second straight, and marked the first back-to-back improvements since January through March of this year (which capped an eight-month period of increases). These foreign purchases advanced by 0.65 percent in October, from an upwardly revised $332.64 billion to $334.79 billion.

Up for the second straight month as well as the goods trade deficit – a development that last happened from November, 2021 through January, 2022. The gap widened by 6.51 percent, from upwardly revised $93.50 billion to $99.59 billion, and this figure was the highest figure since May’s $104.33 billion.

Goods exports fell for the second straight month in October, too – a first since that peak virus period of March through May, 2020. (The streak actually began in February.) The October retreat was 2.06 percent, and brought the total from a downwardly revised $179.69 billion to $175.98 billion – its worst since April’s $176.80 billion

Goods imports grew a second straight month, too, from an upwardly revised $273.19 billion to $275.57 billion. The 0.87 percent increase resulted in the highest monthly level since June’s $282.68 billion.

Services trade, which is dwarfed by goods trade, nonetheless produced some bright spots in the October trade report. The longstanding surplus in this sector, which was so hard hit by the pandemic, improved for the first time in three months, froma downwardly revised $19.37 billion to $21.43. The 10.62 percent increase produced the best monthly total since last December’s $21.66 billion.

Most of this progress stemmed from the ninth consecutive advance and the seventh straight record in services exports. In October, they expanded from an upwardly revised $78.82 billion to $80.65 billlion.

Services imports dipped by 0.38 percent, from an upwardly revised record of $59.45 billion to $59.22 billion.

Manufacturing’s chronic and enormous trade shortfall became more enormous in October, worsening by 4.32 percent, from $129.14 billion to $134.73 billion. That total was the second highest ever, after March’s $142.22 billion.

Manufacturing exports inched down by 0.24 percent, from $110.69 billion to $110.42 billion, while imports surged by 2.07 percent, from $240.10 billion to a second-highest ever $245.17 billion (behind only March’s $256.18 billion).

At $1.2745 trillion (up 18.06 percent from the 2021 level), the year-to-date manufacturing trade deficit is already close to the annual record – last year’s $1.3298 trillion.

By contrast, dictator Xi Jinping’s over-the-top Zero Covid policies no doubt helped depress the also chronic and enormous U.S. goods trade deficit with China by 22.58 percent on month in October. The nosedive was the biggest since the 38.93 percent plummet in February, 2020, when the People’s Republic was locking itself down against the first CCP Virus wave. And the October monthly trade gap was the smallest since August, 2021’s 31.66 percent.

Interestingly, U.S. goods exports to China soared by 31.38 percent on month in October, from $11.95 billion to $15.70 billion. That amount was the highest since last November’s $15.87 billion, and the monthly increase of 31.33 percent was the fastest since October, 2021’s 51.23 percent.

Imports, however, sank by 9.49 percent, from $49.25 billion to $44.57 billion. The level was the lowest since May’s $43.86 billion and the rate of decrease the greatest since April’s 11.82 percent.

Year-to-date, the China goods trade gap has ballooned by 18.68 percent, once again faster than the rise of the U.S. non-oil goods deficit (17.53 percent), its closest global proxy.

In October, for a change, the widening of the overall U.S. trade deficit – and then some – came largely from a booming imbalance with Europe. The goods gap with the continent skyrocketed by 48.51 percent, sequentially, from $15.78 billion to $23.44 billion. That new total was the biggest since March’s $28.50 billion and the rate of increase the fastest since it shot up by 68.37 percent that same month.

U.S. goods exports to Europe actually set a new record in October ($44.27 billion, versus the old mark of $43.61 billion in June). But American global sales of natural gas, which are up 52.51 percent on a year-to-date basis due largely to the continent’s need to replace sanctioned Russian energy supplies, oddly pulled back by 9.90 percent.

At the same time, American goods imports from Europe, surely reflecting a weak euro, leaped by 16.35 percent, from $58.19 billion to $67.71 billion. That total was the second highest on record (trailing only March’s $70 billion) and the monthly increase (16.35 percent) the fastest since March’s 32.43 percent.

October trade in Advanced Technology Products (ATP) set several records, but most were the bad kind. The deficit worsened by 7.70 percent, from $24.32 billion to $26.19 billion, and hit its second straight all-time in the process.

Exports set a new record, rising 4.08 percent on month, from $34.33 billion to $35.73 billion. (The old mark of $34.91 billion dates back to March, 2018.)

Imports also reached their second straight all-time high, climbing 5.58 percent sequentially, frm $58.65 billion to $61.92 billion.

Moreover, year-to-date, the ATP trade shortfall is up 32.17 percent, and at $204.21 billion, it’s already set a new annual record.

Some relief could be in store for America’s trade flows in the coming months. The dollar has weakened in recent weeks, which will restore some price competitiveness for U.S.-origin goods and services at home and abroad. And a recession, a further growth slowdown, and/or continued high inflation could keep reducing imports as well (though that’s the kind of recipe for smaller trade deficits that no one should welcome).

At the same time, solid economic growth could continue, as it has throughout the second half of the year. Americans’ spending power could remain strong, given still huge (though dwindling) amounts of savings amassed during the pandemic. At the behest of U.S. allies, President Biden seems likely to weaken the Buy American provisions governing the green energy production incentives in the Inflation Reduction Act. And China’s export machine could revive as Beijing decides to back away from economically crippling levels of lockdowns.

At this point, however, I’m thinking that recent deficit improvement will keep “rolling over” as Wall Streeters call a steady reversal of investment gains. It’s not much more than a gut feeling. But my hunches aren’t always wrong.

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: An End to a U.S. Trade Winning Streak?

03 Thursday Nov 2022

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, China, consumption-led growth, dollar, economic growth, exchange rate, exports, Federal Reserve, goods trade, imports, inflation, interest rates, Jerome Powell, manufacturing, monetary policy, non-oil goods, services trade, Trade, trade deficit, yuan, zero covid policy, {What's Left of) Our Economy

Today’s official U.S. monthly trade data (for September) signal an end to an encouraging stretch during which the national economy both exported more and imported less – and engineered some growth at the same time. (See, e.g., here and here.)

That’s been encouraging because it means expansion that’s powered more by production than by consumption – a recipe for much more solid, sustainable growth and prosperity than the reverse.

But the new trade figures show not only that the total trade gap widened for the first time since March (to $73.28 billion), and reached its highest level since June’s $80.88 billion. They also revealed that the deficit increased because of lower exports and higher imports for the first time since January.

The discouraging September pattern also indicates that American trade flows are finally starting to feel the effect of the surging U.S. dollar, which hurts the price competitiveness of all domestic goods and services in markets at home and abroad.

Some (smallish) silver linings in the new trade statistics? A bunch of (biggish) revisions showing that the August improvement in America’s was considerably better than first reported.

At the same time, two new U.S. trade records of the bad kind were set – all-time highs in services imports and in imports of and the deficit for Advanced Technology Products (ATP). But services exports reached an all-time high as well.

The impact of the revisions can be seen right away in that combined goods and services trade deficit figure. The September total was 11.58 percent higher than its August counterpart. And it did break the longest stretch of monthly drop-offs since the May-November, 2019 period. But that new August figure is now reported at $65.28 billion, not $67.40 billion. That’s fully 2.55 percent lower.

The August total exports figures saw a noteworthy upward revision, too – by 0.72 percent, from $258.92 billion to $260.79 billion. In September, however, these overseas sales decreased for the first time since January, with the 1.07 percent slippage bringing them down to $258.00 billion. That’s the lowest level since May’s $254.53 billion..

As for overall imports, they were up in September for the first time since May. The increase from $326.47 billion to $331.29 billion amounted to 1.47 percent.

As with the total trade deficit, the August figure for the goods trade gap was revised down by a sharp 1.67 percent, from $87.64 billion to $86.17 billion. And also as with the total trade shortfall, its goods component in September rose for the first time since March. The 7.63 percent worsening, to $92.75 billion, brought the gap to its highest since June’s $99.26 billion.

Goods exports for August were upgraded significantly, too – by 0.75 percent, from $182.50 billion to $183.86 billion. But in September, they shrank on month by 2.01 percent, with the $180.17 billion level the lowest since May’s $179.76 billion.

Goods imports for their part climbed for the first time since May. Their 1.09 percent increase pushed these purchases up from $270.04 billion in August to $272.92 billion in September.

The revisions worked the opposite way for the longstanding service trade surplus. August’s total is now judged to be $20.49 billion – 1.24 percent higher than the originally reported $20.24 billion. And in September it sank for the second straight month, with the 5.01 percent decrease representing the biggest monthly drop since May’s 9.69 percent, and the resulting in a $19.47 billion number the weakest since June’s $18.38 billion.

Services exports for August were upgraded by 0.67 percent, from $76.42 billion to $76.93 billion. They climbed increased further in September – by 1.18 percent to a fourth straight record of $77.83 billion.

The August services import totals were also revised up, with the new $56.44 billion level 0.46 percent higher than the original $56.18 billion. Their ascent continued in September, with the 3.42 percent surge – to a record $58.37 billion – standing as the biggest monthly increase since February’s 5.13 percent.

Domestic manufacturing had a mildly encouraging September, with its yawning, chronic trade gap narrowing by 1.74 percent, from $131.71 billion to $129.41 billion.

Manufacturing exports slumped from $113.34 billion in August (the second best ever after June’s $114.78 billion) to $110.688, for a 2.34 percent retreat.

Manufacturing imports tumbled by 2.02 percent, from August’s $245.05 billion (the second highest all-time amount behind March’s $256.18 billion) to $240.10 billion.

Due to these figures, manufacturing’s year-to-date trade deficit is running 18.17 percent ahead of 2021’s record level (which ultimately came in at $1.32977 trillion). In fact, at its current $1.13974 trillion, it’s already the second highest yearly manufacturing deficit in U.S. history.

Since manufacturing trade dominates America’s goods trade with China, it wasn’t surprising to see the also gigantic and longstanding merchandise trade deficit with the People’s Republic declining in September for the first time in five months.

The small 0.39 percent monthly decrease, from $37.44 billion in August (this year’s top total so far) to $37.29 billion no doubt reflected the effects of Beijing’s continuing and economically damaging Zero Covid lockdowns.

Indeed, however modest, this decrease is noteworthy given that China allowed its currency, the yuan, to depreciate by 11.29 percent versus the dollar this year through September.

U.S. goods exports to the People’s Republic were down in September for the first time since June, with the 7.39 percent fall-off pulling the total from $12.91 billion (a 2022 high so far) to $11.95 billion. The monthly decrease was the biggest since April’s Zero Covid-related 16.25 percent, and the level the lowest since June’s $11.68 billion.

America’s goods imports from China were off on month in September as well – and also for the first time in June. The contraction from August’s $50.35 billion (the second highest all-time total) to September’s $49.25 billion was 2.24 percent.

On a year-to-date basis, the China deficit has now risen by 21.98 percent. That’s important because it continues the trend this year of growing faster than its closest global proxy, the non-oil goods trade deficit (which has widened during this period by just 17.21 percent).

Moreover, this gap has widened overwhelmingly because of China’s feeble importing. Year-to-date, the People’s Republic’s goods purchases from the United States are up just 3.05 percent. The non-oil goods counterpart figure is 15.88 percent.

Finally, the U.S. trade deficit in Advanced Technology Products (the U.S. government’s official name for these goods, hence the capitalization) surged by 18.79 percent sequentially in September, from $20.47 billion to a new monthly record of $24.32 billion. That level topped March’s previous high of $23.31 billion by 4.35 percent.

ATP exports rose a nice 5.39 percent on month in September, from $32.60 billion to $34.33 billion. But imports popped by 10.50 percent, from August’s $53.08 billion to a record $58.65 billion – which surpassed the old record (also set in March) of $56.71 billion by 3.41 percent.

Moreover, year-to-date the ATP deficit is up 29.65 percent, from $137.31 billion to !$178.01 billion. That’s already equal to the third highest total annual total ever, behind last year’s $195.45 billion and 2020’s $188.13 billion. So look for another yearly worst t be hit in these trade flows.

At this point, the trade deficit’s future is especially hard to predict. On the one hand, if the chances of a U.S. recession before too long seem to have increased due to the Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s hawkish remarks yesterday on inflation and interest rates. Normally, that would force the deficit down as tighter monetary policy depressed consumption – and imports.

On the other hand, higher interest rates could well keep strengthening the dollar and keep the deficit on the upswing. So could the still enormous levels of savings (and spending power) that Americans have amassed since the CCP Virus pandemic struck.

The only thing that seems certain, unfortunately, is that the sweet spot that American trade flows have found themselves in recently looks like it’s gone for the time being.

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: The U.S. Trade Deficit Falls Again — For the Wrong Reasons

07 Thursday Jul 2022

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, ATP, Canada, CCP Virus, China, coronavirus, currency, euro, Eurozone, exchange rates, exports, goods trade, imports, Japan, lockdowns, Made in Washington trade deficit, manufacturing, non-oil goods trade deficit, services trade, trade deficit, Vietnam, yen, zero covid policy, {What's Left of) Our Economy

As of this morning’s official data, May makes two straight months during which the total U.S. trade deficit has fallen. The last time that’s happened? The second half of 2019, and then, the shortfall dropped sequentially six consecutive times – between June and November.

Normally such declines would be good news. But of course, these times still aren’t normal thanks to the lingering effects of the CCP Virus and more recently to the Ukraine War. And indeed, back in 2019, this trade gap narrowing took place as economic growth was slowing moderately, but the post-financial crisis expansion was nonetheless continuing. The more recent improvement is likely coming, as often happens, while the economy likely has slipped into recession.

The new Census Bureau release shows that right after it tumbled sequentially in April by a whopping 19.47 percent (a little more than first reported), the combined goods and services trade deficit shrank by another 1.32 percent in May, from $86.69 billion to $85.55 billion. For good measure, this shortfall was the lowest since December’s $78.87 billion.

The gap narrowed because exports advanced respectably and imports rose more sluggishly – a bit of encouraging news, especially considering the dollar’s recent strength (which by itself boosts the prices of U.S. goods and services both at home and abroad versus the foreign competition), and the many weak and/or weakening economies overseas (which increases the pressure they feel to grow by exporting to stronger and/or more open economies).

Even so, combined goods and services exports climbed by 1.20 percent on month in May, from an upwardly revised $252.85 billion to $255.89 billion – their fourth straight monthly record.

Overall imports, however, grew by just 0.56 percent – from a downwardly revised $339.54 billion to $341.44 billion.

The goods trade deficit sank by 2.65 percent sequentially in May, from an upwardly revised $107.82 billion to $104.96 billion – which, as with the overall trade gap was the best monthly level since December ($100.52 billion).

Unfortunately, in May the big services trade surplus that the United States has run for so long dropped sequentially for the first time in three months – and by 8.52 percent, from an upwardly revised $21.13 billion to $19.41 billion.

Goods exports were up 1.71 percent month to month in May, from a downwardly revised $176.02 billion to fourth straight all-time high of $179.03 billion.

Services exports rose, too, and to their second straight all-time high. But the increase was only 0.05 percent, from an upwardly revised $76.52 billion to $76.83 billion.

Goods imports also increased on month in May by just 0.05 percent, from $283.84 billion to $283.99 billion.

But services imports in May grew much faster – by 3.15 percent, from a downwardly revised $55.70 billion to a fourth straight monthly record of $57.46 billion.

The non-oil goods trade deficit is known to RealityChek regulars as the Made in Washington trade deficit, because by stripping out figures for oil (which trade diplomacy usually ignores) and services (where liberalization efforts have barely begun), it stems from those U.S. trade flows that have been heavily influenced by trade policy decisions.

In May, this shortfall was down 3.43 percent sequentially, from an upwardly revised $108.47 billion to $104.68 billion. That’s the lowest monthly total since February’s $103.29 billion.

No such luck with America’s enormous and persistent manufacturing trade deficit. It rose month to month in May by 6.58 percent, from $124.41 billion to a $132.60 billion level that was the second worst of all-time after March’s $142.22 billion.

U.S. exports of manufactures increased sequentially in May by 2.55 percent. And the new $112.15 billion in such sales was their second best ever, after March’s $113.96 billion.

But the much greater amount of manufacturing imports jumped by 4.82 percent, to $244.75 billion – another second best ever (after March’s $256.18 billion).

On a year-to-date basis, the manufacturing deficit is running 24.07 percent ahead of last year’s total, ($504.94 billion to $626.48 billion) which almost guarantees that this shortfall will hit its eleventh straight all-time high, in the process topping last year’s $1.3298 trillion.

Manufactures exports year-to-date have risen by 15.87 percent, but imports have surged by 20.01 percent.

The trade deficit in Advanced Technology Products (ATP) worsened in May as well, advancing 11.94 percent on month to $20.48 billion. ATP exports dipped by 0.71 percent, but imports were up by 3.94 percent.

Given the prominence of both manufactures and Advanced Technology Products in U.S.-China trade, it’s no surprise that as their global trade gaps widened in May, so did the U.S. goods deficit with the People’s Republic. Also at work on all these fronts: the partial easing of the Zero Covid policy-induced lockdowns that halted so much economic activity in China this spring.

The China goods shortfall rose by 3.18 percent, from $30.57 billion to $31.54 billion. And in a continuing departure from a recent pattern, this growth contrasted with the aforementioned 3.43 percent drop in the non-oil goods deficit that’s its closest global proxy.

For most of the time since the Trump tariffs on China started being imposed in 2018, the goods deficit with the People’s Republic actually had been falling while that Made in Washington gap kept growing, suggesting that the former President’s ongoing trade curbs had been achieving a major stated goal. On a year-to-date basis, the China deficit is still up slightly less (26.23 percent) than the Made in Washington deficit (27.56 percent). But clearly the difference between the two is shrinking.

One entirely possible reason is that China has devalued its controlled currency versus the dollar by 5.45 percent since the end of last year – which of course cheapens the price of Made in China products for reasons having nothing to do with free trade or market forces, and which suggests that rather than thinking about cutting or eliminating tariffs on these products, President Biden should be mulling some increases.

For May, U.S. goods exports to China improved sequentially by 9.99 percent, from $11.20 billion to $12.32 billion, while imports grew by 5.01 percent, from $41.77 billion to $43.86 billion.

In other May developments with major U.S. trade partners:

>The U.S. goods deficit with Canada soared by 35.84 percent on month, from $7.25 billion to $9.84 billion. That total was the second biggest ever after the $9.88 billion recorded back in July, 2008;

>A new record was set by the goods gap with Vietnam, and in fact, May’s $10.66 billion figure was the third new all-time high in the last three months and the fourth this year. These results largely reflect Vietnam’s mounting attractiveness versus China as a destination for export-focused foreign investment – in part due to the Trump tariffs and in part due to all the worsening difficulties of doing business in China;

>The goods deficit with the eurozone was up 8.08 percent, and worse is likely to come as the single currency keeps weakening versus the dollar and Europe, too, seems heading into or is already mired in a new recession;

>But despite the continuing weakening of the yen, the goods deficit with Japan fell by 6.86 percent. The ongoing global semiconductor shortage still plaguing the auto industry in particular looks like a big culprit here.

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: Is the New (April) U.S. Trade Report a False Dawn?

07 Tuesday Jun 2022

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, Biden, Census Bureau, China, Donald Trump, exports, goods trade, imports, Made in Washington trade deficit, manufacturing, non-oil goods trade deficit, services trade, South Korea, stimulus, supply chains, Switzerland, tariffs, Trade, trade deficit, Zero Covid, {What's Left of) Our Economy

Although today’s new official figures showed a major dropoff in the U.S. trade deficit between March and April, and the results came from a normally encouraging combination of more exports and fewer imports, the Census data also show that big caveats and questions are hanging over these results and how enduring they might be.

First and foremost, the improvement in the combined goods and services deficits, and all virtually all the trade balances comprising it, could be resulting from a dramatic slowdown in U.S. economic growth. Second, the latest decline in the chronic and huge U.S. goods trade gap with China surely stems from Beijing’s recent over-the-top (but surely temporary) Zero Covid policies, which have further snagged already tangled up supply chains. And third, large revisions in some of the numbers (especially for services trade) inevitably cast some doubt as to their reliability lately.

In fact, these features of the report – along with the still-near historic levels of many of these trade deficits and other usually typical gap-widening developments like a strong U.S. dollar and still-astronomical levels of economic stimulus from Washington – are telling me that my prediction last month of higher deficits to come will age pretty well.

Not that the narrowing of the trade gap in April was bupkis. The combined goods and services deficit fell 19.11 percent from March’s all-time high of $107.65 billion (which itself was revised down a hefty 1.96 percent) to $87.08 billion. This level was the lowest since December’s $78.87 billion and the nosedive the biggest since December, 2012’s 19.85 percent.

And as just mentioned, the improvement came from the right combination of reasons. Total exports hit their third straight monthly record, rising 3.49 percent from an upwardly revised (by 0.99 percent) $244.11 billion to $252.62 billion

Overall imports, meanwhile, tumbled 3.43 percent from their record $351.79 billion to $339.70 billion. The total was the second biggest ever, but the decrease was the greatest since the 13.16 shrinkage during pandemic-y and recession-y April, 2020.

The trade shortfall in goods was down 15.04 percent from a downwardly revised (by 1.04 percent) $126.81 billion in March to $107.74 percent in April. This level, too, was the lowest since December’s $100.52 billion, and the 15.04 percent sequential tumble the biggest since April, 2015’s 15.09 percent.

Goods exports rose sequentially by 3.57 percent in April, from 170.04 billion to a third consecutive record of $176.11 billion. And U.S. purchases of foreign goods sank by 4.38 percent on month in April, from a downwardly revised (by 0.65 percent) record $296.85 billion to $283.84 billion (as with total imports, the second highest result of all time). The decrease was the biggest since the 12.79 percent drop in that pandemic-y April, 2020.

But even the above sizable revisions paled before those made for services trade. The March surplus was upgraded fully 4.48 percent, from $18.34 billion to $19.16 billion, and the April figure grew by another 7.83 percent to $20.66 billion – the highest level since December’s $21.66 billion.

Services exports (apparently) deserve much of the credit. They reached an all-time high of $76.52 billion. This total bested May, 2019’s previous record of $75.41 billion by only 1.46 percent, but the milestone is significant given the outsized hit suffered by the service sector worldwide during the pandemic period.

April services exports, moreover, rose 3.30 percent from March’s $74.07 billion – a total that itself was revised up by 4.23 percent.

Services imports set their third consecutive monthly record in April, rising 1.73 percent, to $55.86 billion, from March’s upwardly revised (by 4.19 percent) $54.19 billion.

A big April fall-off also came in the non-oil goods trade deficit – known to RealityChek regulars as the Made in Washington trade deficit, because by stripping out figures for oil (which trade diplomacy usually ignores) and services (where liberalization efforts have barely begun), it stems from those U.S. trade flows that have been heavily influenced by trade policy decisions.

This shortfall decreased by 14.72 percent in April, to $108.68 billion, from March’s downwardly revised record $127.42 billion. The drop was the biggest since March, 2013’s 16.74 percent.

The enormous and persistent manufacturing trade deficit retreated in April from record levels, too. But even though the month’s $124.41 billion shortfall was 12.71 percent lower than March’s all-time high $142.22 billion, and even though the monthly decline of 12.71 percent was the biggest since pandemic-y February, 2020’s 23.09 percent, this deficit was still the second biggest ever.

April’s manufactures exports of $109.36 billion were 4.03 percent lower than March’s record $113.96 billion, but were still the second best total on record. Ditto for the month’s manufactures imports, which tumbled 8.85 percent from their March record of $256.18 billion to $233.50 billion.

Another April fall-off from a record monthly deficit came in advanced technology products (ATP). After ballooning by 73.65 percent sequentially in March, to $23.31 billion, the recently volatile gap narrowed in April by 21.50 percent, to $18.30 billion.

Both the better manufactuing and ATP trade figures surely stemmed at least in part from the Zero Covid policies that interfered with so much industrial production from China. The U.S. goods deficit with the People’s Repubic, however, narrowed by just 10.02 percent on month in April, from $34 billion to $30.57 billion. Even so, the level was the lowest since last July’s $28.56 billion.

U.S. goods exports to China were down on month in April by 16.25 percent (their biggest drop since February, 2021’s 278.85 percent), from $13.38 billion to $11.20b. This total is the lowest since last September’s $11.03 billion.

The much greater amount of U.S. goods imports from China plummeted 11.82 percent n month in April, from $47.37 billion to $41.77 billion – the lowest level since last July’s $40.32 billion.

Also notable – breaking a pattern going back several years — the 10.02 percent April monthly drop in the U.S. goods deficit with China was smaller than the month’s sequential decline in the non-oil goods deficit (14.72 percent). And on a yar-to-date basis, the China deficit is up only slightly less (27.59 percent) than the non-oil deficit (28.95 percent). So the next few months’ worth of data may shed some light on whether the Trump (now Biden) tariffs on China are losing their effectiveness, or whether the last few months’ numbers are anomalies.

Other significant April results for individual U.S. trade partners: The goods deficit with South Korea set a new record of $4.09 billion – 23.79 percent higher than March’s total of $3.30 billion and 21.70 percent greater than the old record of $3.36 billion set last September.

And the goods deficit with Switzerland cratered in April by 67.63 percent, to $2.89 billion, from March’s $8.93 billion level. The percentage shrinkage of this bilateral trade gap was the biggest since September, 2018, when a $1.22 billion U.S. deficit turned into a $149 million surplus.

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: A Terrible March for U.S. Trade – With Worse Likely to Come

05 Thursday May 2022

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, Canada, China, currency, dollar, European Union, exchange rates, exports, Federal Reserve, goods trade, imports, inflation, Japan, Made in Washington trade deficit, manufacturing, Mexico, oil, services trade, Trade, trade deficit, {What's Left of) Our Economy

So many records (mainly the wrong kind) were revealed in the latest official monthly U.S. trade figures (for March) that it’s hard to know where to begin. Some important points need to be made before delving into them, though.

First, don’t blame oil. Sure, this trade report broke new ground in containing a full month’s worth of Ukraine war-period data. But despite the disruption in global energy markets triggered by the conflict, on a monthly basis, the U.S. petroleum balance actually improved sequentially, from a $2.94 billion deficit to a $1.58 billion surplus on a pre-inflation basis (the trade flow gauges from these monthly government releases that are most widely followed)

And even on an inflation-adjusted basis, February’s $8.73 billion oil deficit shrank to $5.15 billion in March.

Second, don’t blame inflation much at all. The Census Bureau doesn’t report after-inflation service trade results on a monthly basis, but it does provide this information for goods (which comprise the great majority of U.S. trade flows). And the March figures show that before factoring in inflation, the goods trade deficit worsened by 18.89 percent from $107.78 billon in February to a new record $128.14 billlion, whereas when inflation is counted, this gap widened on month by 18.86 percent, from $115.96 billion in February to $137.83 billion in March. (Major trade wonks will note that these goods and services data are presented according to two different counting methods, but trust me: the difference in results is negligible.)

Third, don’t blame China. The March pre-inflation goods deficit with the People’s Republic was up sequentially from $42.26 billion to $47.37 billion (12.10 percent). But neither that absolute level nor the rate of increase was anything out of the ordinary, much less a record. In fact, the monthly percentage increase was just half the rate of that of the shortfall for total non-oil goods (a close worldwide proxy for China goods trade) – which hit 24.06 percent. One big takeaway here: the Trump China tariffs are still exerting a major effect, along of course with the supply chain knots Beijing has created with its over-the-top Zero Covid policy.

But regardless of where the blame lies, (and it looks like major culprits are continued strong U.S. spending on both consumer goods and capital equipment, combined with an improvement of the supply chain situation outside China), all-time highs and worsts abounded in the March trade report, include worsenings at record paces.

The combined goods and services trade deficit jumped on-month by 22.28 percent, to $109.80 billion. That total was the third straight record for a single month and the increase the fastest since the 43.71 percent explosion in March, 2015 – a month during which much of the country was recovering from severe winter weather.

As mentioned above, the $128.14 billion goods trade gap was the highest ever, too, topping its predecessor (January’s $108.60 billion) by 17.99 percent. As for the 18.89 percent monthly increase, that was also the biggest since March, 2015 (25.18 percent).

Even a seeming trade balance bright spot turns out to be pretty dim. The headline number shows the service trade surplus improving by 1.96 percent – from $17.98 billion to $18.34 billion. Unfortunately, nearly all of this increase stemmed from a big downward revision in the initially reported February surplus, from $18.29 billion.

As known by RealityChek regulars, the aforementioned non-oil goods trade deficit can also be called the Made in Washington trade deficit – because by stripping out figures for oil (which trade diplomacy usually ignores) and services (where liberalization efforts have barely begun), it stems from those U.S. trade flows that have been heavily influenced by trade policy decisions.

And not only was the March Made in Washington deficit’s monthly increase of 24.06 percent the second fastest ever (after March, 2015’s 31.24 percent). The March, 2022 level of $128.70 billion was the biggest ever.

The story of the non-oil goods trade gap’s growth was overwhelmingly a manufacturing story. The sector’s huge and chronic trade shortfall shot back up from $106.49 billion in February (which was a nice retreat from January’s $121.03 billion) to a new record $142.22 billion. And the monthly percentage jump of 33.55 percent was the biggest since the 37.62 percent during weather-affected March, 2015.

Manufactures exports advanced sequentially by a strong 20.53 percent this past March. That topped the previous all-time monthly high of $105.37 billion (set back in October, 2014), by 8.15 percent. But the much greater volume of imports skyrocketed by 27.43 percent. And their $256.18 billion total smashed the old record of $222.79 billion (from last December) by 14.98 percent.

Within manufacturing, U.S. trade in advanced technology products (ATP) took a notable beating in March, too. The $23.31 billion trade gap was an all-time high, and its 73.65 percent monthly growth the worst since the shortfall slightly more than doubled on month in March, 2020 – as the Chinese economy and its huge electronics and infotech hardware manufacturing bases reopened after the People’s Republic’s initial pandemic wave.

Yet as noted above, despite these extaordinary manufacturing and ATP trade numbers, the latest March numbers for manufacturing-heavy U.S. China trade were anything but extraordinary. U.S. goods exports to the People’s Republic increased on-month by 15.36 percent – slower than the rate for manufactures exports globally, but the fastest rate since the 52.47 percent rocket ride they took  last October.

Goods imports from China, however, rose much more slowly from February to March than manufactures imports overall – by just 12.10 percent, from $42.26 billion to $47.37 billion.

When it comes to other major U.S. trade partners, the March American goods deficit with Canada of $8.03 billion was the highest such total since July, 2008 ($9.88 billion). It was led by a 30.81 percent advance in imports reflecting the mid-February reopening of bridges between the two countries that had been closed due to CCP Virus restrictions-related protests.

The goods deficit with Mexico worsened even faster – by 35.11 percent, to $11.92 billion. That total was its highest since August, 2020’s $12.77 billion.

Another major monthly increase (31.59 percent) was registered by the U.S. goods shortfall with the European Union, but its March level ($16.87 billion) was subdued relative to recent results.

Anything but subdued was the Japan goods shortfall, which shot up sequentially in March by 49 percent. The $6.77 billion total also was the biggest since November, 2020’s $6.78 billion, and the monthly jump the greatest since the 84.37 percent burst in July, 2020, during the rapid recovery from the sharp U.S. economic downturn induced by the first wave of the CCP Virus and related economic and behavior curbs.

The Europe and Japan trade figures stem significantly from a development that’s bound to turn into an increasingly formidable headwind for the U.S. trade balance for the foreseeable future – the dollar’s rise versus other leading currencies to levels not seen in 20 years. And unless it’s reversed substantially soon, China’s latest currency devaluation, which began in mid-April, will weaken the effects of both the Trump tariffs and the Zero Covid policy. So even if the Federal Reserve’s (so far modest) inflation-fighting efforts do slow the American economy significantly, it’s likely that, as astronomical as the March trade deficits were, we ain’t seen nothin’ yet.

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: A Rough January for U.S. Trade

09 Wednesday Mar 2022

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, ATP, China, goods trade, Made in Washington trade deficit, manufacturing, non-oil goods deficit, Russia, services trade, tariffs, Trade, trade deficit, Ukraine, Ukraine invasion, Ukraine-Russia war, {What's Left of) Our Economy

As known by RealityChek readers, yesterday I decided to put off finishing my normal same-day report on the new official monthly U.S. trade figures in order to spotlight some critical (and oddly neglected) developments in the Ukraine war/crisis.

But the trade results (for January) are still worth examining in detail, even though (as always), they’re lagging indicators, and even though they of course pre-date all the likely disruption to the global economy and U.S. trade flows seemingly sure to stem from the Russian invasion of Ukraine and ensuing conflict.

Notably, the combined goods and services trade gap hit its second straight monthly record in January, rising 9.43 percent sequentially, to $89.69 billion. Moreover, the deterioration came on virtually all key fronts. And the December total was revised up by a big 1.52 percent, from $80.73 billion to $81.96 billion.

The January goods deficit increased, too and hit its third consecutive record. The increase was 6.99 percent, from an upwardly revised $101.75 billion to $108.86 billion.

Meanwhile, the longstanding U.S. surplus in services, which has been considerably depressed by a CCP Virus pandemic that’s hit this sector particularly hard the world over, sank by 4.40 percent, from $19.79 billion to $19.17 billion. The sequential decrease came to 3.13 percent, the decline was the first since August, and the downward revision of the initially reported December level was a huge 4.40 percent.

Total exports fell on month for the first time since September – by 1.73 percent, from an upwardly revised and all-time high of $228.35 billion to $224.40 billion.

Goods exports dipped, too, and also for the first time since September. The decline was 1.47 percent, from a downwardly revised $158.21 billion to $155.89 billion.

As for services exports, they sagged by 2.32 percent, from an upwardly revised $70.14 billion to $68.51 billion. This decline was the first since August.

Overall imports climbed by 1.04 percent, from an upwardly revised $310.30 billion to $314.09 billion, and they hit their sixth monthly record in a row.

Goods imports rose 1.84 percent, from an upwardly revised $259.96 billion to $264.75 billion, and achieved their fifth consecutive all-time high.

Services imports in January, however, decreased month-to-month for the second time in a row – which hasn’t happened since January and February, 2021. The fall-off was 2.01 percent, from an upwardly revised $50.35 billion to $49.34 billion. That latter total was the lowest since August, and the December revision was a substantial 2.38 percent.

As known by RealityChek regulars, non-oil goods trade is the vast portion of U.S. trade flows heavily affected by America’s trade deals and other trade policy decisions – hence my monicker “Made in Washington” trade. (Trade liberalization in services remains at an early stage globally, and oil is rarely on the table in national trade policy-making or diplomacy.)

The export-import gap in this category hit its third straight record in January, widening by 6.55 percent, from $100.56 billion to $107.15 billion.

Non-oil goods exports sank sequentially by 1.72 percent, from $138.38 billion to $136.00 billion, while imports set their fifth straight record. They increased by 1.76 percent, from $238.94 billion to $243.14 billion.

The nation’s oil trade gap soared on a relative basis in January – nearly quadrupling on a pre-inflation basis (the same gauge used for all the numbers in RealityChek trade reports unless specified otherwise). But the January total of $426 million was tiny in absolute terms.

The two big (but modest) exceptions to the January pattern of expanding trade shortfalls came in manufacturing and Advanced Technology Products (ATP).

The former’s chronic and mammoth trade deficit actually retreated for the second straight month in January. The decline was 1.32 percent – from December’s $122.65 billion to $121.03 billion. But the new total was still the third highest ever.

Manufacturing exports plunged by 7.80 percent on month in January, from $100.14 billion to a $92.33 billion level that was the lowest monthly total since August’s $97.13 billion.

Industry’s imports shrank by 4.23 percent in January, from a record $222.79 billion to $213.36 billion – the lowest since September’s $211.33 billion.

The decrease in the January ATP trade deficit was 1.77 percent, from $19.80 billion to $19.45 billion, and the drop was the second in a row – a first since last June and July.

ATP exports plummeted in January from a record $34.46 billion to $29.65 billion. That 13.96 percent drop was the biggest such figure since the 16.55 percent nosedive in January, 2020 – as the pandemic was raging through and locking down China. And the January figure was the lowest since August’s $29.49 billion.

ATP imports were off significantly, and from a record, too. The December-January swoon of 9.66 percent, from $54.36 billion to $49.11 billion, was the biggest since last February’s 13.09 percent, and brought these purchases to their lowest level since last August’s $45.56 billion.

The enormous U.S. goods deficit with China was up in January, but by just 0.61 percent sequentially, from $36.15 billion to $36.37 billion. The increase was much smaller than that for non-oil goods (the closest global proxy for U.S.-China trade) – and adds to the evidence (see most recently here) that the Trump China tariffs have helped rein in this trade gap. But the monthly level was the highest since December, 2018’s $36.60 billion.

U.S. goods exports to China, however, decreased in January for the third consecutive month – by 14.27 percent, from $13.38 billion to $11.47 billion. That drop, moreover – to the lowest level since last September’s $10.91 billion – illustrates again, how short the Trump Phase One trade deal with China keeps falling of its targets.

U.S. goods imports from China declined as well in January – by 3.41 percent, from $49.53 billion to $47.85 billion. That shrinkage was the first since last April, and brought the monthly total to its lowest level since September’s $47.41 billion.

Since, as noted, these January trade figures predate the invasion of Ukraine (as will February’s), future prospects are especially murky.  So the wisest course of action seems to be holding off on the prognostication and focusing on data as it comes out until some clarity emerges – at least until the next next global shock.   

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: A Record Number of Records in U.S. Trade II

09 Wednesday Feb 2022

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, ATP, Biden, CCP Virus, China, coronavirus, COVID 19, Donald Trump, Federal Reserve, goods trade, interest rates, Made in Washington trade deficit, manufacturing, monetary policy, non-oil goods trade deficit, services trade, tariffs, Trade, trade deficit, trade war, Wuhan virus, {What's Left of) Our Economy

Just because yesterday’s first RealityChek post on the U.S. government’s latest official trade data focused on all the monthly records set by the December monthly results doesn’t mean that the annual figures for 2021 were lacking in all-time highs and lows – and for the same CCP Virus-related reasons.

So let’s get to them – and conclude with some needed context. For as known by RealityChek readers, isolated data don’t tell all the story, or even the most important part of the story. And the big takeaway from examining the context is that in a surprising number of ways, 2021 looked pretty ordinary trade-wise.   

For now, though, let’s start by noting that last year’s combined goods and services trade deficit hit a record $859.13 billion – the second straight all-time high, and a 26.96 percent jump from 2020’s $676.68 billion.

But don’t think that annual increase was in a class by itself. Far from it. Here are the first bits of context: As recently as 1998 and 1999, the total trade gap widened by 53.45 percent and 53.97 percent, respectively. In 1984 and 1993, the figures were 88.82 percent and 79.31 percent, respectively.

Further, in 1983, the trade shortfall more than doubled (surging by 139.14 percent), and in1972 and 1977, it more than quadrupled. In addition, three times during the 1970s, the trade balance switched from surplus to deficit, and in the 1960s, major drops in the surplus occurred.

Even so, it’s crucial to remember that during these periods, oil and its price changes were major chunks of U.S. trade flows and deficits. Big rises in the dollar’s value have also often contributed substantially to big past increases in the trade shortfall. And never forget that the absolute numbers were much smaller then, so large percentage changes were much easier to generate.

Still, the trade deficit’s growth last year ranks as pretty impressive. Ditto for the fact that unlike was the case for decades, it’s largely unrelated to oil (although the small $13.98 billion surplus in this sector turned into an $8.44 billion deficit).

Speaking of oil’s role in U.S. trade, as known by RealityChek regulars, it matters in part because it’s rarely the subject of trade deals and other trade policy decisions. In fact, stripping out from U.S. trade flows oil and services (where liberalization efforts have made relatively little progress) yields the statistics for non-oil goods – the trade flows that are heavily influenced by U.S. trade policy.

And 2021 represented the seventh straight year of record deficits in this “Made in Washington” trade account. Moreover, the $1.06993 trillion level topped 2020’s by 15.66 percent. This increase, though, impressive as it was, was well short of the biggest in history, too (in a series going back to 1992). That dubious distinction goes to 1993’s 76.63 percent, but as recently as 2015, the Made in Washington deficit was climbing at a 21.23 percent annual rate.

Last year’s goods trade gap of $1.09068 trillion was the second straight all-time high and an 18.29 percent widening from 2020’s $922.03 billion. Again, however, the all-time worst is orders of magnitude higher (227.86 percent in 1977), and all the aforementioned influences and qualifiers apply. But as recently as 2010 (another first year of recovery following a steep economic downturn), the goods deficit was up 27.27 percent on year.

The $231.55 billion surplus in U.S. services trade was no record, either, but it was the lowest annual total since 2012’s $215.21 billion, reflecting how hard this sector has been hammered by the pandemic and the economic policy and behavior curbs it’s spawned.

In terms of trade flows closely followed by RealityChek, the huge and chronic deficit in manufacturing soared by 19.23 percent year-on-year in 2021, from $1.11527 trillion to $1.32977 trillion. The shortfall was an eleventh straight annual record and the fourth consecutive year it topped the trillion-dollar mark. The annual increase was high by recent standards, but smaller than 2010’s 27.90 percent.

The Advanced Technology Products (ATP) category saw its fifth straight record annual deficit, and the $197.16 billion total was 3.13 percent above 2020’s $191.18 billion.

The also huge and chronic U.S. goods trade deficit with China was up 14.52 percent on year in 2021, from $310.26 billion to $355.30 billion. Not only was this figure well below the record $418.23 billion set in 2018, but the annual increase was slower than in the non-oil goods deficit – which indicates that the sweeping and often steep Trump administration tariffs on imports from the People’s Republic have been having their intended effects.

Total U.S. exports grew by a healthy 18.46 percent on year in 2021, from $2.13444 trillion to $2.52854 trillion. But they’re still below the all-time high of $2.53864 trillion, set in 2018.

Goods exports were up on year in 2021, too – by 23.32 percent, from $1.42880 trillion to $1.76197 trillion, but also remain lower than their peak – the $1.67691 trillion also achieved in 2018.

The hard hit services industries managed an 8.63 percent annual improvement in exports in 2021, from $705.64 billion to $766.50 billion. But they still remain 12.52 percent shy of their record of $876.30 billion, set in 2019.

Non-oil goods exports rose to an all-time annual high of $1.55849 trillion in 2021 – a figure 20.42 percent higher than 2020’s $1.29421 trillion. But they’re also short of a 2018 record ($1.49101 trillion).

Domestic manufacturing boosted its exports even faster last year – by 18.91 percent, from $953.02 billion to $1.13325 trillion. But it’s all-time high of $1.19227 trillion dates from way back in 2014!

Despite ATP overseas sales advancing by a nearly as strong 18.57 percent, in 2021, from $300.78 billion to $356.62 billion, they’re still below their record, too – 2018’s $368.63 billion.

U.S. goods exports to China were 21.35 percent higher in 2021 than in 2020 – rising from $124.49 billion to $151.07 billion. The growth rate of 21.35 percent was slightly higher than that for global proxy non-oil goods – a likely result of former President Trump’s 2020 Phase One trade deal.

Arguably more impressive, it was the fastest such growth since the 32.25 percent hit in 2010, when the United States was recovering from the Great Recession. (The best performance in U.S. goods exports to China came way back in 1988 – 43.59 percent – when the absolute numbers of course were tiny.)

The nation’s import figures continued the string of trade flow records. Combined goods and services imports of $3.38767 trillion were an all-time high, and grew 20.51 percent over 2020’s $2.81113 trillion. They also blew past the previous peak of $3.11959 trillion, set in 2018.

Stronger growth (21.35 percent) was registered by goods imports, which expanded from $2.53083 trillion to $2.82565 trillion. The previous high – which also came in 2018 – was $2.55566 trillion.

In services, annual import growth was just 16.23 percent in 2021 – rising from $460.30 billion to $535.02 billion. The yearly record for these purchases was 2019’s $591.12 billion,

The record story remained intact in non-oil goods imports. These increased from $2.21934 trillion to $2.62842 trillion – an 18.43 percent growth rate. The previous all-time high for these imports was 2018’s $2.31086 trillion.

Imports in manufacturing reached their own record in 2021 – $2.64303 trillion. That surpassed 2018’s previous all-time high of $2.17711 trillion and topped 2020’s $2.06829 trillion level by 19.09 percent.

For ATP, annual imports advanced by 12.52 percent in 2021 – from $491.96 billion in 2020 to $553.78 billion. The previous record was just $496.06 billion, also set in 2018.

And Americans bought $506.37 billion worth of goods from China in 2021. That topped 2020’s $434.75 billion total by 16.47 percent, but was considerably short of 2018’s record $538.51 billion and the growth rate was slower than that for global proxy non-oil goods – likely another effect of the Trump tariffs that have been largely maintained by President Biden.

But true to the truth that context is crucial, let’s return to that methodology. The main context for last year’s record trade deficits is their size compared with that of the entire economy. And here, in particular, 2021 doesn’t look like such a trade disaster.

Specifically, the combined goods and services deficit as a share of total gross domestic product (GDP) in pre-inflation dollars (to produce apples-to-apples results) came to 3.74 percent in 2021. That’s a big jump from 2020’s 3.24 percent. But it’s not only lower than the record 5.53 percent of 2006, but than the 5.50 percent of 2005, the five percent of 2004, the 4.91 percent of 2007, the 4.82 percent of 2008, and the 3.85 percent of 2002.

Nor is the 2021 growth rate of 15.43 percent in this share unheard of – or even close. For example, during the first calendar year of the economy’s recovery from the Great Recession, in 2010, it was up by 22.34 percent. And between 1999 and 2000, it soared by 35.71 percent. (The growth rate was twenty percent in also pandemic distorted 2020.)

The same goes for the goods deficit as a share of GDP. Last year it was 4.74 percent – a 7.48 percent increase from 2020’s 4.41 percent. But the 4.74 percent figure has been exceeded no fewer than six times going back to 1999 alone. And the growth rate has been topped by 2011’s 10.21 percent, 2010’s 22.44 percent, 2005’s 10.29 percent, 2004’s 15.01 percent, 2003’s 8.74 percent, 2002’s 9.02 percent, and 2000’s 24.57 percent (the 21st century record), along with 9.43 percent in pandemic-distorted 2020.

The Made in Washington trade deficit as a share of GDP did hit a 21st century record in 2021 – 4.65 percent. And before 2020’s 4.43 percent, the next highest such figure was 2005’s 4.17 percent. But here, too, the 2021 growth rate in the deficit as a share of GDP of 4.97 percent is ordinary. Leaving aside 2020’s 13.30 percent, it’s been bested no fewer than nine times since 2000, including the record 18.84 percent in 2010.

As a result, it’s not entirely unreasonable to approach 2022 with some trade optimism. Big wild cards remain – mainly how the CCP Virus evolves, how effective the U.S. and global responses become, the future of those China tariffs, and Federal Reserve’s upcoming decisions on interest rates and bond-buying – which could greatly influence the economy’s growth rate.

But if there’s a case that even with all the virus-related distortion and massive government stimulus, the U.S. trade numbers were held in check last year, there’s one that even better results may soon start appearing.        

(What’s Left of) Our Economy: A Record Number of Records in U.S. Trade I

08 Tuesday Feb 2022

Posted by Alan Tonelson in (What's Left of) Our Economy

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Advanced Technology Products, ATP, China, goods trade, Made in Washington trade flows, manufacturing, non-oil goods trade deficit, services trade, Trade, trade deficit, trade surplus, {What's Left of) Our Economy

As made abundantly clear by today’s official U.S. report, which brings the story up to December, 2021 and therefore the full year – last year was one for the books when it came to U.S. trade flows – and specifically the record books. The same goes for the month of December. I can’t remember ever seeing data revealing so many monthly and annual bests and worsts in terms of exports, imports, and trade balances.

There’s no question that the responsbility rests with the continuing and wildly fluctuating impact on the entire U.S. and world economies of the CCP Virus and the related lockdowns and other curbs on business and consumer activity. But the records are so numerous that they’re definitely worth listing.

Let’s start cover the December monthly figures today, and save the annual data for tomorrow – just to break things up into digestable pieces. The month’s combined goods and services trade deficit came in at $80.73 billion, a modest increase of only 1.76 percent from November’s $79.33 billion that may have reflected a U.S. economic growth slowdown toward the end of the fourth quarter.  And that November number was revised down by a noteworthy 11.05 percent. The December total wasn’t an all-time monthly high, but it did trail only the $80.81 billion level of September.

A record was set by the monthly goods deficit, and at $101.43 billion, it was the second straight, and an increase of 3.21 percent over November’s $98.27 billion.

For a change, the total December trade gap was held down by the $20.70 billion services surplus – the highest since May’s $21.33 billion.

As known by RealityChek regulars, the portion of U.S. trade flows that best reflects the effectiveness of past and present U.S. trade policy decisions is the non-oil goods deficit – which strips out services trade because liberalization efforts here are still in their infancy, and trade in energy-related petroleum products because they’re rarely the objects of trade diplomacy.

And this “Made in Washington” trade shortfall hit its second straight record in December, with the $100.54 billion level 4.48 percent higher than November’s $96.23 billion.

Turning to some trade flows followed by RealityChek with special interest, the manufacturing trade deficit in December retreated by 1.14 percent from the all-time monthly high of $124.06 billion set in November. But the latest $122.65 billion level now stands as Number Two.

The trade gap in Advanced Technology Products (ATP) dropped on month in December, too – by a steep 8.98 percent, from $21.76 billion to $19.80 billion. The record is November, 2020’s $21.90 billion, leaving the new December total as the third highest on record.

The huge and longstanding goods deficit with China hit its second highest level of the CCP Virus era in December – $36.25 billion. (September, 2021’s $36.50 billion was the highest.) The total was a robust 11.86 percent higher than November’s $36.22 billion, but well short of the October, 2018’s record of $42.89 billion, set when U.S. importers were tying to “front run” new anticipated Trump administration tariffs.

December’s $228.14 billion worth of combined goods and services exports were a third straight record, and topped November’s $224.73 billion figure by 1.52 percent.

Goods exports of $158.27 billion in December were 1.25 percent higher than November’s $156.25 billion level, but were 0.47 percent shy of the record $159.01 billion set in October.

The $69.88 billion in services exports in December were far from an all-time high in a sector that’s been especially hard it during the pandemic period, but they were 2.03 percent better than November’s $68.48 billion. They also represented the best performance since December, 2019’s $73.18 billion and the third straight sequential high of the CCP Virus era.

As for non-oil goods, their December exports of $138.48 billion topped November’s $135.60 by 2.09 percent, but October’s $139.15 billion still stands as the monthly record.

In the manufacturing sector, exports improved on month in December by 1.68 percent, from $98.49 billion to $100.14 billion. They have a ways to go, however, before matching the all-time high of $105.61 billion, set in March, 2018.

Interestingly, though, that December manufacturing exports advance came despite a 16.70 monthly nosedive in U.S. goods exports to China – still often touted as a promising market for American industrial products. The swoon from $16.07 billion to $13.38 billion was the worst since the 26.83 percent plunge in February, and the monthly figure the lowest since September’s $10.91 billion.

ATP exports performed better in December, jumping 12.03 percent from November’s $30.76 billion to a record $34.46 billion. The new level is fractionally better than the former all-time high of $34.26 billion set in October.

On the import side, combined U.S. purchases of foreign goods and services of $308.87 billion in December was a fifth straight monthly record and a 1.58 percent increase from November’s $304.07 billion.

Also a fifth straight all-time high were December goods imports of $259.70 billion. And they were 2.03 percent higher than November’s $254.52 billion.

December’s services imports of $49.18 billion were actually 0.74 percent below November’s $49.54 billion, but were still the second best performance of the pandemic period.

The December non-oil goods imports total of $238.98 billion, however, were a fourth straight monthly record, and beat the November figure of $231.82 billion by 3.09 percent.

December imports of $222.79 billion in the manufacturing sector represented a third straight record, but only a 0.11 percent increase from November’s $222.55billion.

And four straight monthly records are now on the books for ATP imports, which climbed by 3.31 percent, from $52.52 billion in November to $54.26 billion in December.

Finally, as far as December is concerned, at $49.53 billion, U.S. goods imports from China set a fourth straight CCP Virus-era record, and stood 2.38 percent higher than November’s $48.39 billion. But that December total has been topped three times before, including the record $52.08 billion set during the tariff front-running days of October, 2018.

Tomorrow we’ll examine those annual 2021 trade results – which you’ll see are just as records-rich! 

 

← Older posts

Blogs I Follow

  • Current Thoughts on Trade
  • Protecting U.S. Workers
  • Marc to Market
  • Alastair Winter
  • Smaulgld
  • Reclaim the American Dream
  • Mickey Kaus
  • David Stockman's Contra Corner
  • Washington Decoded
  • Upon Closer inspection
  • Keep America At Work
  • Sober Look
  • Credit Writedowns
  • GubbmintCheese
  • VoxEU.org: Recent Articles
  • Michael Pettis' CHINA FINANCIAL MARKETS
  • RSS
  • George Magnus

(What’s Left Of) Our Economy

  • (What's Left of) Our Economy
  • Following Up
  • Glad I Didn't Say That!
  • Golden Oldies
  • Guest Posts
  • Housekeeping
  • Housekeeping
  • Im-Politic
  • In the News
  • Making News
  • Our So-Called Foreign Policy
  • The Snide World of Sports
  • Those Stubborn Facts
  • Uncategorized

Our So-Called Foreign Policy

  • (What's Left of) Our Economy
  • Following Up
  • Glad I Didn't Say That!
  • Golden Oldies
  • Guest Posts
  • Housekeeping
  • Housekeeping
  • Im-Politic
  • In the News
  • Making News
  • Our So-Called Foreign Policy
  • The Snide World of Sports
  • Those Stubborn Facts
  • Uncategorized

Im-Politic

  • (What's Left of) Our Economy
  • Following Up
  • Glad I Didn't Say That!
  • Golden Oldies
  • Guest Posts
  • Housekeeping
  • Housekeeping
  • Im-Politic
  • In the News
  • Making News
  • Our So-Called Foreign Policy
  • The Snide World of Sports
  • Those Stubborn Facts
  • Uncategorized

Signs of the Apocalypse

  • (What's Left of) Our Economy
  • Following Up
  • Glad I Didn't Say That!
  • Golden Oldies
  • Guest Posts
  • Housekeeping
  • Housekeeping
  • Im-Politic
  • In the News
  • Making News
  • Our So-Called Foreign Policy
  • The Snide World of Sports
  • Those Stubborn Facts
  • Uncategorized

The Brighter Side

  • (What's Left of) Our Economy
  • Following Up
  • Glad I Didn't Say That!
  • Golden Oldies
  • Guest Posts
  • Housekeeping
  • Housekeeping
  • Im-Politic
  • In the News
  • Making News
  • Our So-Called Foreign Policy
  • The Snide World of Sports
  • Those Stubborn Facts
  • Uncategorized

Those Stubborn Facts

  • (What's Left of) Our Economy
  • Following Up
  • Glad I Didn't Say That!
  • Golden Oldies
  • Guest Posts
  • Housekeeping
  • Housekeeping
  • Im-Politic
  • In the News
  • Making News
  • Our So-Called Foreign Policy
  • The Snide World of Sports
  • Those Stubborn Facts
  • Uncategorized

The Snide World of Sports

  • (What's Left of) Our Economy
  • Following Up
  • Glad I Didn't Say That!
  • Golden Oldies
  • Guest Posts
  • Housekeeping
  • Housekeeping
  • Im-Politic
  • In the News
  • Making News
  • Our So-Called Foreign Policy
  • The Snide World of Sports
  • Those Stubborn Facts
  • Uncategorized

Guest Posts

  • (What's Left of) Our Economy
  • Following Up
  • Glad I Didn't Say That!
  • Golden Oldies
  • Guest Posts
  • Housekeeping
  • Housekeeping
  • Im-Politic
  • In the News
  • Making News
  • Our So-Called Foreign Policy
  • The Snide World of Sports
  • Those Stubborn Facts
  • Uncategorized

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Current Thoughts on Trade

Terence P. Stewart

Protecting U.S. Workers

Marc to Market

So Much Nonsense Out There, So Little Time....

Alastair Winter

Chief Economist at Daniel Stewart & Co - Trying to make sense of Global Markets, Macroeconomics & Politics

Smaulgld

Real Estate + Economics + Gold + Silver

Reclaim the American Dream

So Much Nonsense Out There, So Little Time....

Mickey Kaus

Kausfiles

David Stockman's Contra Corner

Washington Decoded

So Much Nonsense Out There, So Little Time....

Upon Closer inspection

Keep America At Work

Sober Look

So Much Nonsense Out There, So Little Time....

Credit Writedowns

Finance, Economics and Markets

GubbmintCheese

So Much Nonsense Out There, So Little Time....

VoxEU.org: Recent Articles

So Much Nonsense Out There, So Little Time....

Michael Pettis' CHINA FINANCIAL MARKETS

RSS

So Much Nonsense Out There, So Little Time....

George Magnus

So Much Nonsense Out There, So Little Time....

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • RealityChek
    • Join 408 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • RealityChek
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar