U.S. Trade Deficit Grows to $68.3 Billion

The value of imports increased 3 percent, to $325.8 billion, while exports climbed to $257.5 billion.

Shipping containers at the Port of Long Beach in Long Beach, California, on October 13, 2022.

At the start of the year, the U.S. trade deficit grew to the widest in three months, reflecting a pickup in imports of merchandise.

The trade gap in goods and services increased 1.6 percent, to $68.3 billion, in January from a month earlier, Commerce Department data showed Wednesday. The figures aren’t adjusted for inflation. The median estimate in a Bloomberg survey of economists called for a $68.7 billion gap.

The value of imports increased 3 percent, to $325.8 billion, while exports climbed to $257.5 billion.

A resilient domestic economy helped bolster demand for imports, while a months-long slide in the dollar likely helped drive overseas purchases of American-made goods.

On an inflation-adjusted basis, exports of consumer goods and motor vehicles and parts climbed to a record, while the real value of capital goods shipments overseas was the highest since March 2019. Furthermore, less shipping congestion and a normalization of global supply chains have generally helped facilitate trade between the U.S. and other countries.

“The rebound in trade flows to start the year signals that the economy continues to carry momentum, but we do not expect the strength to be sustained in the months ahead,” Oxford Economics economists Matthew Martin and Ryan Sweet said in a note.

Prior to Wednesday’s report, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta’s GDPNow estimated net exports would add about 0.6 percentage point to growth in the first quarter. That would be slightly more than trade added in the fourth quarter.

While the nominal goods-trade deficit narrowed slightly, the January merchandise shortfall on an inflation-adjusted basis widened to $101.8 billion, also the biggest in three months.

Digging Deeper

—With assistance from Jordan Yadoo & Ana Monteiro.

 

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