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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article
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June 9,
2008
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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What to look for in
Tuesday’s Trade Deficit Data
Tuesday, the Commerce Department will
report the April trade deficit.
Last month, the Commerce Department
reported the March deficit on goods and
services was $58.2 billion. For April,
my published forecast is $60.0 billion
and the consensus forecast is $59.5
billion.
The March deficit on trade in goods
was $68.6 billion and was partially
offset by a $10.4 billion surplus on
services.
The key data to watch Tuesday will be
the deficits on petroleum and motor
vehicles, the deficit with China, and
the progress of U.S. exports. Especially
critical for signs of an export led
economic recovery would be exports of
capital goods.
Together, the deficits on petroleum,
on motor vehicles and with China totaled
about $60 billion in March, or equal to
the entire trade deficit on goods and
services.
The deficit on petroleum products is
expected to rise from $33.1 billion in
March to $34.7 billion in April.
According to the Labor Department report
on import and export price data,
petroleum import prices rose 4.4 percent
in April. Commerce and Labor Department
pricing data do not always coincide,
because the Labor Department reports
import prices earlier and its data are
more preliminary. Energy Department data
indicate the volume of oil import
volumes increased about 0.5 percent in
April; the same caveats regarding Labor
Department pricing data apply to Energy
Department import volume data.
The trade deficit on motor vehicles
was $10.7 billion in March, down from
$11.4 billion in February. Sluggish new
car sales in the U.S. have pulled down
this deficit a bit; however, the shift
from truck-based vehicles to small cars
favors import brands.
In addition to high oil prices and
the shift to smaller motor vehicles,
overvaluation of the dollar against the
Chinese yuan continues to push up the
trade deficit. China has permitted the
yuan to rise 16 percent since July 2005,
or less than 5 percent a year. However,
thanks to rising productivity, the
underlying value of the yuan rises much
more than 5 percent a year. This is
evidenced by the fact that China has
been forced to increase its currency
market intervention to sustain its
controlled exchange rate for the yuan.
In 2007, it purchased $462 billion in
dollars and other foreign currencies, as
compared to $247 billion in 2006.
The Chinese yuan is at least 40
percent undervalued against the dollar.
In 2007, the U.S. deficit with China hit
a new record and was $16.1 billion in
March. Consumer purchases of Chinese
goods have been slowed, in recent
months, by rising gasoline prices, which
sap household income, and a trend toward
diversification in sourcing for imported
consumer items. The quality problems and
safety risks associated with Chinese
imports are playing some role. However,
China’s undervalued currency continues
to provide a 35 percent subsidy on
Chinese exports to the United States.
Since February 2006, monthly exports
have risen $34 billion to $148.5
billion, thanks to a weaker dollar
against the euro, pound and other market
determined currencies. This has
moderated the deficit on trade in
non-petroleum products and the overall
trade deficit.
U.S. exports compete with EU exports
in nearly every category, and a weaker
dollar against the euro helps boost U.S.
sales in Europe and elsewhere around the
world. However, oil is priced in dollars
and a weaker dollar has pushed up,
somewhat, the price of oil and the U.S.
petroleum trade deficit. Further, many
other Asian governments follow China’s
lead by intervening in foreign currency
markets and maintaining undervalued
currencies, and this limits U.S. export
gains in Asia.
Exports of agricultural commodities
and industrial materials have performed
well because of strong demand in Asia
and a weaker dollar. However, over the
last three months, exports of capital
goods have stalled. These were $37.7
billion in March, and down from $40.1
billion in December. If exports are to
significantly lift the U.S. economy from
recession, this category will have to
perform better.
Whatever the final trade deficit
figure, it will be close to 5 percent of
GDP, which is too large to be
sustainable.
The foreign borrowing to finance the
deficit is about $50 billion a month, as
only about 11 percent of the deficit is
financed by new direct investment in
productive assets. Debt to foreigners
now exceeds $6.5 trillion, and this
flood of greenbacks abroad is driving
down the dollar, heightening concerns
about the solvency of U.S. financial
institutions, pushing up the price of
gold, and exacerbating the recession.
The stubbornly large trade deficit
heightens the risk of recession. The
deficit subtracts about $250 billion
from GDP, and that amount could double
if the economy slips into a prolonged
recession.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
Robert H. Smith School of Business and former Chief Economist at
the U.S. International Trade Commission. ►More Faculty
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