Trade deficit grows in January as imports hit record highs

The US trade deficit grew larger in January as imports, including crude-oil prices, zoomed to all-time highs.

WASHINGTON: The US trade deficit grew larger in January as imports, including crude-oil prices, zoomed to all-time highs.

The latest snapshot of trade activity, reported by the Commerce Department yesterday, showed the country's trade gap increased to $58.2 billion. That was up from a trade shortfall of $57.9 billion in December and was the highest since November.

Imports of goods and services climbed to a record high of $206.4 billion in January. The United States' voracious appetite for imported crude oil, where prices skyrocketed to the loftiest on record, figured into the increasing demand for overall imports.

The trade gap widened even as exports of US-made goods and services totaled a record high of $148.2 billion in January. The declining value of the US dollar relative to other currencies such as the euro, is helping to make US-made goods cheaper and thus more attractive to foreign buyers.

Economists were expecting the trade deficit in January to be a bit larger, growing to around $59 billion.

Still, rising energy prices are aggravating the nation's trade situation.
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The average price of imported crude oil soared to a record $84.09 a barrel in January. That pushed the country's imported crude-oil bill to an all-time high of $27.1 billion in January.

The country's trade deficit with oil producing nations, including Saudi Arabia, Venezuela and Nigeria, grew to $15.5 billion in January, up from $12.6 billion in December.
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