United States balance of trade

The balance of trade of the United States moved into substantial deficit from the late 1990s, especially with China and other Asian countries. This has been accompanied by a relatively low savings ratio and high levels of government and corporate debt. Debate continues over the causes and impacts of this trade deficit, and the nature of any measures required in response.

History

The US last had a trade surplus in 1975. In 1985, the United States began running a persistent trade deficit with China. During the 1990s, the overall U.S. trade deficit expanded, particularly with Asian economies. By 2012, the U.S. trade deficit, along with the federal budget deficit and public debt, reached record or near-record levels. The overall U.S. trade deficit widened 12.2 percent in 2022 to nearly $1 trillion as Americans bought large volumes of foreign machinery, pharmaceuticals, industrial supplies and car parts, according to new data released by the Commerce Department.

Causes and impact

The notion that bilateral trade deficits are bad in and of themselves is overwhelmingly rejected by trade experts and economists. Some economists note that the trade deficit increases when the U.S. economy grows and Americans are able to buy the goods and services they want from abroad. But many also worry that a persistent trade deficit could lead to lower employment and economic growth in the United States.

Over the long run, nations with trade surpluses tend also to have a savings surplus. The U.S. generally has developed lower savings rates than its trading partners, which have tended to have trade surpluses. Germany, France, Japan, and Canada have maintained higher savings rates than the U.S. over the long run.

According to Carla Norrlöf, there are three main benefits to trade deficits for the United States:

  1. Greater consumption than production: the US enjoys the better side of the bargain by being able to consume more than it produces
  2. Usage of efficiently produced foreign-made intermediate goods is productivity-enhancing for US firms: the US makes the most effective use of the global division of labor
  3. A large market that other countries are reliant on for exports enhances American bargaining power in trade negotiations

Balance of trade table

US trade in goods imbalance by country (2023)
Country Exports (USD billion) Imports (USD billion) Trade imbalance (USD billion) Trade imbalance / exports
China 147.8 426.9 -279.1 -1.89
Mexico 322.7 475.2 -152.5 -0.473
Vietnam 9.8 114.4 -104.6 -10.7
Germany 76.7 159.3 -82.6 -1.08
Japan 75.7 147.2 -71.5 -0.944
Ireland 16.8 82.3 -65.5 -3.90
Canada 354.4 418.6 -64.2 -0.181
South Korea 65.1 116.2 -51.1 -0.785
Taiwan 40.0 87.8 -47.8 -1.195
Italy 28.9 72.9 -44.0 -1.52
India 40.4 83.7 -43.3 -1.07
Thailand 15.6 56.3 -40.7 -2.61
Malaysia 19.4 46.2 -26.8 -1.38
Switzerland 27.8 52.3 -24.5 -0.881
Indonesia 9.8 26.8 -17.0 -1.73
France 43.9 57.6 -13.7 -0.312
Austria 5.5 19.1 -13.6 -2.47
Sweden 8.6 18.4 -9.8 -1.14
Hungary 3.1 10.9 -7.8 -2.52
South Africa 7.1 14.0 -6.9 -0.972
Israel 14.0 20.8 -6.8 -0.486
Finland 3.0 7.3 -4.3 -1.43
Russia 0.6 4.6 -4.0 -6.67
Philippines 9.3 13.3 -4.0 -0.430
Nigeria 2.6 5.7 -3.1 -1.19
Czech Republic 4.6 7.5 -2.9 -0.630
Poland 11.0 13.2 -2.2 -0.2
Saudi Arabia 13.8 15.9 -2.1 -0.152
Algeria 1.2 3.0 -1.8 -1.5
Norway 5.0 6.1 -1.1 -0.22
Venezuela 2.5 3.6 -1.1 -0.44
Singapore 42.4 40.9 1.5 0.035
Colombia 17.7 16.1 1.6 0.090
Spain 25.2 23.1 2.1 0.083
Egypt 4.5 2.4 2.1 0.467
Chile 18.8 15.6 3.2 0.170
Argentina 11.4 6.4 5.0 0.439
Brazil 44.6 39.1 5.5 0.123
United Kingdom 74.3 64.2 10.1 0.136
Belgium 38.8 22.8 16.0 0.412
Australia 33.6 15.9 17.7 0.527
Hong Kong 27.8 4.1 23.7 0.853
Netherlands 81.3 38.5 42.8 0.526
Other Countries 211.0 204.0 7.0 0.033
Total 2,018.1 3,080.2 -1062.1

Balance of trade by select country by year

Canada

This table shows the balance of trade by year for Canada that is seasonally adjusted in the millions of dollars. This table only displays trade of goods. Source:

Year Imports Exports Balance
2024 411,886.7 349,908.2 -61,978.5
2023 418,010.3 354,408.0 -63,602.3
2022 437,417.6 359,084.2 -78,333.4
2021 357,274.7 309,604.0 -47,670.7
2020 270,025.5 256,212.3 -13,813.3
2019 318,588.8 292,820.3 -25,768.5
2018 318,574.8 299,731.7 -18,843.1
2017 299,065.4 282,773.8 -16,291.6
2016 277,719.8 266,734.5 -10,985.3
2015 296,305.1 280,855.2 -15,449.9
2014 349,286.1 312,817.0 -36,469.2
2013 332,503.6 300,754.9 -31,748.8
2012 324,263.0 292,650.5 -31,612.5

China

This table shows the balance of trade by year for China that is seasonally adjusted in the millions of dollars. This table only displays trade of goods. Source:

Year Imports Exports Balance
2024 438,742 143,226.7 -295,515.2
2023 427,246.6 147,635.5 -279,611.1
2022 536,268.7 153,987.4 -382,281.3
2021 504,246.3 151,439.4 -352,806.9
2020 432,548 124,581.5 -307,966.5
2019 449,110.7 106,481.2 -342,629.5
2018 538,514.2 120,281.2 -418,232.9
2017 505,165.1 129,997.2 -375,167.9
2016 462,420 115,594.8 -346,825.2
2015 483,201.7 115,873.4 -367,328.3
2014 468,474.9 123,657.2 -344,817.7
2013 440,430.0 121,746.2 -318,683.8
2012 425,619.1 110,516.6 -315,102.5

Mexico

This table shows the balance of trade by year the United States has with Mexico that is seasonally adjusted in the millions of dollars. This table only displays trade of goods. The last year the United States had a trade surplus with Mexico was in 1994. Source:

Year Imports Exports Balance
2024 505,523.2 334,031.9 -171,491.2
2023 472,907.4 323,637.2 -149,270.2
2022 452,015 327,016.1 -124,998.8
2021 382,569.3 277,194.6 -105,374.7
2020 323,476.9 212,512.8 -110,964.1
2019 356,093.6 256,676.5 -99,417.1
2018 343,680.5 265,968 -77,712.5
2017 312,666.7 243,609 -69,057.8
2016 293,500.6 230,228.8 -63,271.8
2015 296,433.3 236,460.1 -59,973.2
2014 295,730.0 241,007.2 -54,722.8
2013 280,556.0 225,954.4 -54,601.7
2012 277,593.6 215,875.1 -61,718.5

India

This table shows the balance of trade by year the United States has with India that is seasonally adjusted in the millions of dollars. This table only displays trade of goods. Source:

Year Imports Exports Balance
2024 87,338.1 41,537 -45,801.1
2023 83,557.1 40,317.5 -43,239.6
2022 85,517.4 46,819.2 -38,698.2
2021 73,308.2 39,817.4 -33,490.8
2020 51,254.6 27,081.7 -24,172.9
2019 57,879.0 34,222.8 -23,656.2
2018 54,249.6 33,176.6 -21,073.0
2017 48,549.4 25,647.8 -22,901.6
2016 46,024.2 21,647.2 -24,377.1
2015 44,782.7 21,452.9 -23,329.7
2014 45,358.0 21,499.1 -23,858.9
2013 41,810.0 21,810.4 -19,999.5
2012 40,512.6 22,105.7 -18,406.9

Balance of trade by year

This table lists the balance of trade by year in millions of dollars and this contains the seasonally adjusted results regardless of country. This table only displays trade of goods. Source:

Year Imports Exports Balance
2024 3,266,410.2 2,061,690.8 -1,204,719.4
2023 3,076,796.4 2,020,479.2 -1,056,317.2
2022 3,239,732.9 2,072,648 -1,167,084.9
2021 2,828,515.5 1,757,743.7 -1,070,771.8
2020 2,331,477.2 1,429,995.4 -901,481.8
2019 2,491,699.6 1,645,940.3 -845,759.2
2018 2,536,145.3 1,665,786.9 -870,358.4
2017 2,339,591.3 1,547,195.4 -792,395.9
2016 1,451,459 2,186,785 -735,326
2015 1,503,328.4 2,248,811.4 -745,483
2014 1,621,873.8 2,356,356.1 -734,482.3
2013 2,267,986.7 1,578,516.9 -689,469.9
2012 2,276,267.1 1,545,820.8 -730,446.3
2011 2,207,954.0 1,482,507.0 -725,447.0
2010 1,913,858.0 1,278,493.0 -635,365.0

See also

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