U.S. trade deficit widens in February as goods exports fall

Reuters

Published Apr 05, 2023 09:08AM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. trade deficit widened more than expected in February as exports of goods declined, suggesting that trade could drag on economic growth in the first quarter.

The trade deficit increased 2.7% to $70.5 billion, the Commerce Department said on Wednesday. Data for January was revised to show the trade gap widening to $68.7 billion instead of $68.3 billion as previously reported. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the trade deficit rising to $69 billion.

Exports fell 2.7% to $251.2 billion, likely reflect slowing global demand as well as the U.S. dollar's past appreciation, which is making U.S.-made goods less competitive on international markets.

Goods exports plunged 4.8% to $169.2 billion, weighed down by declines in natural gas and nonmonetary gold. Exports of motor vehicles, parts and engines fell $1.9 billion, while those of consumer goods decreased $1.4 billion. There were also decreases in exports of capital goods. But exports of services increased $1.7 billion to $82.0 billion, boosted by travel.

Imports fell 1.5% to $321.7 billion, with goods declining 2.2% to $262.2 billion. Domestic demand is slowing amid higher borrowing costs aimed at taming inflation, which has seen businesses less enthusiastic about boosting inventory of goods.