Mon, May 28, 2012, 8:13 PM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Trade deficit widens to $48.8 billion in December

Trade deficit widens to $48.8 billion in December; exports to Europe rise after steep decline

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Monthly U.S. exports to Europe grew in December, a hopeful sign after a steep decline the previous month. But, some economists remain concerned that the region's debt crisis will still weigh on the U.S. economy this year.

The Commerce Department said Friday that the overall trade deficit widened to $48.8 billion in December because imports grew at a faster pace than exports. It was the largest imbalance since June.

Imports rose 1.3 percent, largely because the U.S. bought more foreign autos, auto parts and industrial machinery.

Exports increased 0.7 percent. And exports to Europe rose 7.2 percent. That followed November's decline of more than 6 percent.

Still, exports to the 17 nations that use the euro grew just 1.7 percent in December from November. And exports to the euro zone fell 1.6 percent in December from the same month in 2010.

Paul Dales, an economist with Capital Economics, said export growth to the euro zone is down sharply from 15 percent year-over-year growth to that region in August.

Europe, which consumes nearly one-fifth of America's exports, is likely to suffer a recession this year. That's a key reason Capital Economics is forecasting U.S. economic growth of just 1.5 percent in 2012.

"With the danger that the euro-zone enters a deep recession still very real, weaker demand from Europe will weigh on US export growth both this year and next," said Dales, who relies more on year-over-year trade figures because they smooth out seasonal changes for countries and regions.

Others are slightly more optimistic. Economists at JPMorgan Chase forecast economic growth of around 2.3 percent. Trade is expected to be neutral as solid growth in exports is expected to be roughly offset by growth in imports.

For the 2011, the U.S. deficit climbed to $588 billion, the highest level since 2008. Both exports and imports rose to all-time highs.

Economic growth weakens when exports decline because factories tend to produce fewer goods. And U.S. companies earn less.

The economy grew at an annual rate of 2.8 percent in the final three months of 2011. For 2011, it expanded by just 1.7 percent, roughly half the rate in 2010.

However, that forecast could prove too optimistic if the slowdown in Europe worsens, given that this region is a top market for U.S. exports.

For the year, the deficit with China climbed to an all-time high of $295.5 billion, up 8.2 percent from the previous record set in 2010. Both imbalances were the largest ever recorded with a single country. Those deficits, coming at a time of high unemployment, have triggered calls in Congress for a crack-down on what critics see as unfair Chinese trade practices such as the country's undervalued currency.

 

32 comments

  • Linda  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  3 months ago
    What's this about Europe? I can't go to the store looking for an item and find it made outside of China. I don't want to buy Chinese. But I have because theirs is the only choice for what I need. Europe?
  • A Yahoo! User  •  Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  •  3 months ago
    what a crock...good news exports to Europe grew in December...the bad news the trade deficit grew to 48 billion dollars...imports grew faster than the exports...
  • LeoA  •  3 months ago
    Hey...don't worry about the trade deficit! The Keystone Pipeline will reduce oil prices and make nat gas even cheaper. Oh, that's right, Obama killed the pipeline so our gas and oil will go up in price. How do you like the coming $5./gal for gasoline? He's also closing coal-fired plants that produce electricity. Friends, the cheapest alternative to coal is natural gas, but it costs over TWICE AS MUCH. If you like paying twice as much to heat your home and 20% more to drive your car, by all means reelect Mr. Obama..
    • hihi hihi 3 months ago
      We're heading for $5 gasoline regardless if the pipeline gets built or not IDIOT.
    • John G 3 months ago
      Dang, idiots calling idiots an idiot.
    • Js-thoughts 3 months ago
      The Keystone Pipeline has nothing to do with gas prices nor our trade defects. What a moronic comment.
  • Stephen  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  3 months ago
    A huge part of our exports are farm products, without those numbers in the mix, exports would suck big time. It is an election year, expect government reports to become even more bogus.
  • RobertG  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
    So we bailed out the banks once again, via a stealth mode 26B settlement with the government of which 20B is backed by the tax payers. This guarantees that no one will go to jail and some losers/victims will get a check for 2k for losing their home. However, in only one month our trade deficit is nearly twice this celebrated settlement?

    We are doomed people. It's becoming every man for himself.
    • DEBBIE 3 months ago
      How funny...lets blame banks, bankers, real estate people etc. Congress passed ALL the rules via Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, SEC, etc. Why don't we go after Congress and the Federal, State, and Local Administrations? Tax payers follow the rules and always pay for Congresses mistakes.
      Tax payers have bailed out these companies and will never see the money back: GM-$25B, Chrysler-$12B, Fannie and Freddie-$153B, Solyndra-$535M, SunPower, a politically connected solar energy company, to create maybe 10-15 permanent jobs. Good job Obama administration !!!!
      BTW: BAC and CITI paid back 100% of TARP to tax payers.....
    • Js-thoughts 3 months ago
      Debbie, you must be a banker. Lets not hate bankers lets hate everyone else. First time I have seen that one.
  • Chet  •  Vicksburg, Mississippi  •  3 months ago
    WHAT EXPORTS? FROM USA? GET REAL UNTIL CONGRESS REPEALS NAFTA WE WILL ALL BE IN DANGER, THE PRODUCTS MADE IN CHINA ARE NOT SOLD THERE THAT IS WHAT WE NEED IN USA PRODUCTS MADE HERE STAY HERE FOR OUR RESALE AND IF OTHERS WANT WE CAN SEND BUT WE HAVE COMPONAIES ALL OVER AND THEY ARE ONLY BRING ING THE GOODS BACK HERE CHEAP GARBAGE THAT WE DONT WNAT WE WNAT USA MADE GET IT SEND CONGRESS A BIG MESSAGE ALL ON THE CHOP BLOCK THIS YEAR NEW PEOPLE IN CONGRESS FOR THE NEXT 3 ELECTIONS WITH CONGRESS MEMBERS BEING REMOVED BY THE PUBLIC THEIR EMPLOYEER!
    • Erik 3 months ago
      China is not part of NAFTA
  • STEVE  •  Fort Worth, Texas  •  3 months ago
    Nothing does more to devalue a currency than trade deficits.
  • Lane  •  Doylestown, Pennsylvania  •  3 months ago
    The people who think the European debt crisis has gone away are in denial and aren't doing their own home work. Nothing has been structurally changed or fixed. The ECB was able to buy a little time by handing some money to the banks to buy European sovereign debt but they don't have enough money to continue to do that for much longer. At some point, the bond auctions will have to go back to the free market. People are right when they say Greece is small but they are not irrelevant. Whatever they do will set a precedent for the other EU countries with debt problems - Portugal, Italy, Spain, and many others. Greece will default (technically they already have) - not a problem but what will happen when the others default. The IMF, FED, ECB, and China don't have enough liquidity to slow this down. American banks are on the hook and will be on the hook for the CDS's. We will survive it but it will get very ugly. The result will be much worse than what we saw with Lehman in 2008. This LOW VOLUME rally we've seen over the past month is just the big players using the media to sucker the mom and pops in the market so they can get out. It won't be much longer and everyone will be running for the door all at once. Get ready for a CRASH that will make 2008 look small. Small investors, if you don't know what you are doing and depend on the media to form your investment strategy, don't get suckered in. Do your own home work and use a little common since. These insider media people who are saying next stop DOW 25,000 are the same people who were preaching that everything was fine in the summer of 2008 - they knew what was coming - read up on it. I will get bashed with ''the world isn't going to end comments'' but if you are reading this. Step back from all this media #$%$ and think for yourself. There is way more down side risk right now than they are letting on - EU debt, Iran, the Real USA economy etc. I hate to see people get their life savings taken by the manipulated Wall Street Casino.
  • R U mad!  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    Ha ha! and meanwhile I thought americans believed in Capitalism? Why would companies not save money by hiring workers overseas for a fraction of what they'd have to pay here?
    • Benton 3 months ago
      Capitalism must be coupled to nationalism. This is a big reason why China is winning, and the US is not. This means that the economic policies of a country make the entire system stronger, not just foster a system that ulimately concentrates wealth in the hands of a few.

      The real wealth of a society lies with its people and their values, and both must be protected and renewed. What people with your myopic self-interest based views need to see is Haiti. Now there is a society where it was decided that the best way to run a country is to allow the job creators to make the decisions for the country based solely on their self interest. This is trickle-down economic theory in its purest form. There the trickle is just the occasional drop for the common man languishing in misery and thirst for opprotunity. This is the course for the US, set by the Republicans, and fueled by greed of CEOs, Wall Street and Souther racism. Too bad for a people who have brought so much good to the world over the past 100 years.
    • Js-thoughts 3 months ago
      Capitalism only works when everyone plays by the same rules. If people are allowed to cheat it is tough to win.
    • R U mad! 3 months ago
      to Benton: I totally agree with everything you said. this is the point i was alluding to in my statement!!! as a brit., i believe western europeans have a different prospective on life and our values are differently structured. cheers!
  • rusty c  •  3 months ago
    We need more weapons !!!
  • Ron  •  3 months ago
    The Fed doesn't care, because there's no inflation.
  • Quincy Magoo  •  3 months ago
    What else can we sell to support our trade deficit? I bet we could get a couple hundred bucks for the Grand Canyon. Just gotta find the title and get a picture on Ebay.
  • Jimmy b  •  Bangkok, Thailand  •  3 months ago
    The dollar ia worthless now, we should further de-value it??????????????? Really doesn't seem to mater how weak the buck is, no one is buying too much of our goods anyway. Strenghten the dollar so that those of us who travel don't have to mortgage the fram to exchange dollars to Euros or whatever. No matter which way the US turns, all we do is get s*it on. Rant ends here, Jeez!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  • Wolfpackengnr  •  3 months ago
    Unions make it impossible to compete internationally in procing, despite the innovative work being done in places we have to compensate current and past workers (including zillions in pension liabilities squeezed by uniions for decades). Its a joke what union workers make. Its also a joke how much executives make. I'm sorry but some dweeb holding a door at a hotel in New York does not deserve to be able to retire in style in Florida. Its a flippin laugher. But that is the kind of crap Unions pull.

    Unions. pFFFFfffffffffffffffffff..............
  • Outsider  •  Lawrence, Massachusetts  •  3 months ago
    It is easy just to pick China for such such but it does not indicate this is the real problem. I feel it is just to hide the real problem. Look what you import from China? Go figure get those imported from elsewhere and how much you will save or how much more you will pay.
    What is that term? Scapegoat? Okay, this is not just a single year problem, not even a ten year problem, and this is not a tariff issue, this is a fundamental issue: we Americans are addicted to that thing and we do not want to solve it (at least politicians do not since they want to be there for ever). What Greeks are doing now?
  • Herky1942  •  Newark, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
    How could this BE? Washington put out a report the Manufacturing Grew last month in America,,, Maybe it was South America they were talking about??
  • Benton  •  Paderborn, Germany  •  3 months ago
    Capitalism must be coupled to nationalism. This is a big reason why China is winning, and the US is not. This means that the economic policies of a country should make the entire system stronger, not just foster a system that ulimately concentrates wealth in the hands of a few. Such a society will ulimately fail, like Rome, like Western absolute monarchies, like Soviet communism.

    The real wealth of a society lies with its people and their values, and both must be protected and renewed. What people with myopic self-interest based views need to see is Haiti. Now there is a society where it was decided that the best way to run a country is to allow the 'job creators' to make the decisions for the country based solely on their self-interest. This is trickle-down economic theory in its purest form. There the trickle is just the occasional drop for the common man languishing in misery and thirst for opprotunity. This is the course for the US, set by the Republicans, and fueled by the greed of CEOs, Wall Street, and Southern racism. Too bad for a people who have brought so much good to the world over the past 100 years.

    I celebrate capitalism. It is big part of why my life is good. But, just like I love fast cars and speed, I know that on the road, we cannot race ahead without consideration of fellow drivers. Otherwise, surely all will wreck.
  • realtime  •  3 months ago
    The economy expanded by 1.7% in 2011, roughly half of 2010. Now that's hope and change we can hang our hat on.
  • nomore  •  Cincinnati, Ohio  •  3 months ago
    Why can't we devalue the dollar?
  • Joe  •  Chaska, Minnesota  •  3 months ago
    J. Liver-funda's. da funda's Benny, da funda's
 
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