Energy News  
TRADE WARS
US trade deficit swells amid record China gap

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Oct 14, 2010
The US trade deficit ballooned in August as the gap with China hit a fresh record, official data showed Thursday, suggesting further weakness in the economic recovery.

The Commerce Department said the August trade deficit rose nearly nine percent from July to 46.3 billion dollars.

That was far worse than economists predictions of a 44.5 billion dollar gap.

Despite exports of goods and services edging up to a two-year high, imports jumped even higher.

"Our exports barely budged but we bought a lot more of just about everything including food, consumer goods, vehicles, capital goods and industrial supplies," said Joel Naroff of Naroff Economic Advisors.

Imports increased 2.1 percent from July, to 200.2 billion dollars, while exports edged up only 0.2 percent, to 153.9 billion dollars.

The August trade deficit was the second biggest since October 2008 when the global financial crisis accelerated, and confirmed a trend of widening gaps that began in mid-June 2009.

The strong surge in US demand for imports, despite a weaker dollar, could lower widespread expectations the Federal Reserve will resume major asset purchases to boost the recovery.

"The US is sucking in lots of goods from the rest of the world, which supports the case that monetary policy has already accomplished its job of reviving domestic demand," said Brian Wesbury, chief economist at First Trust Economic.

The US surplus in services, a key trade strength of the world's largest economy, shrank for the third consecutive month as imports of services reached a record high.

Americans' dependence on foreign oil and appetite for imported consumer goods once again caused imports to swell.

In August, exports of goods were virtually flat, while imports of goods jumped 3.9 billion dollars to 166.7 billion.

The department downwardly revised the July deficit to 42.6 billion dollars, from an initial report of 42.8 billion dollars.

The politically sensitive gap with China expanded eight percent, to 28.0 billion dollars wiping out the previous record of 27.9 billion dollars set in October 2008.

The United States has long criticized China's currency policy, accusing Beijing of keeping the yuan undervalued to gain an unfair trade advantage.

The monthly trade report came on the eve of the scheduled release Friday of the US Treasury Department's assessment on currency manipulation.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in April delayed the report, originally due an April 15, in a bid to pursue other ways to advance US interests with China.

Currency tensions boiled over at last week's annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund, with China rejecting calls for a quick yuan revaluation.

Thursday's trade report highlighted the difficulties of President Barack Obama's goal to boost exports to help get the economy into a sustainable recovery from the worst recession in generations.

The report added fuel to the growing furor over China, widely blamed in the United States for job losses as cheap Chinese manufactured goods pour into the economy.

The House of Representatives last month passed a bill that allows Washington to impose countervailing duties on imports from countries found to be manipulating their currencies.

The news of a record-high trade deficit with China, the country's second-largest trading partner, also came less than three weeks ahead of crucial November 2 mid-term elections.

Obama's Democratic Party is expected to lose seats in Congress to the Republican opposition.

"The ongoing, American job-destroying leakage of national wealth to China confirms the House's wisdom in passing the anti-currency manipulation bill last month," said Alan Tonelson, a research fellow at the US Business and Industry Council.

"President Obama finally needs to wake up as well, urge Senate passage, and help American businesses and their employees fight foreign protectionism," he said.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Global Trade News



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


TRADE WARS
Falling US dollar hurts emerging economies: China researcher
Shanghai (AFP) Oct 13, 2010
A loose monetary policy in the United States hurts the global economy and puts massive inflation pressure on emerging economies, a researcher with a Chinese government think tank said Tuesday. The criticism of US monetary policy and its weakening dollar comes as Washington steps up attacks on Beijing over its yuan exchange rate, which US lawmakers claim is grossly undervalued and is causing ... read more







TRADE WARS
NASA Partnership Sends Earth Science Data To Africa

SMOS Water Mission Winning Battle With Interference

NASA Loosens GRIP On Atlantic Hurricane Season

'A-Train' Satellites Search For 770 Million Tons Of Dust In The Air

TRADE WARS
NKorea Jamming Device A New Security Threat

KORE Telematics Introduces Location-Based Service Offering

Trimble Releases Next Gen Of TerraSync GPS Data Collection Software

EU's Galileo satnav system over budget, late: report

TRADE WARS
Footage shows land clearing threatens Indonesia tigers: WWF

Litter collected, trees planted for global climate campaign

Deforestation examined in U.N. report

World's oldest trees under threat

TRADE WARS
US hikes ethanol blend in gasoline amid outcry

Biofuels And Biomaterials March To Scale

Brown University Chemists Simplify Biodiesel Conversion

Bioenergy Choices Could Dramatically Change Midwest Bird Diver

TRADE WARS
Structure Of Plastic Solar Cells Impedes Their Efficiency

SunEdison Sells Europe's Largest Solar Power Plant To First Reserve

Kyocera Modules Power Largest Solar Electric System In Orange County

Transformative Solar Array To Be Developed On Reclaimed Ohio Strip Mine

TRADE WARS
China's wind power capacity to increase five-fold by 2020

Wind power to grow massively until 2030

Google in major bid for Eastern US wind power

Findings About Wind Farms Could Expand Their Use

TRADE WARS
Nine suffocate at China mine: Xinhua

Six dead in China coal mine accident

China bans mine bosses from sending assistants down shafts

Australia minister reassures coal industry

TRADE WARS
Chinese Nobel laureate's wife slams 'illegal house arrest'

Former Chinese communist officials in blunt reform call

China says Nobel won't change nation's political system

Nobel Peace Prize award has China venting


The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement