Donald Trump’s trade boogeyman, the U.S. goods deficit, has just grown bigger
WASHINGTON — The biggest complaint of the Trump administration as it seeks to renegotiate trade arrangements has just gotten bigger: the U.S. trade deficit ballooned to its highest level in a decade in Donald Trump’s first year in office.
Figures released Tuesday show the U.S. deficit in goods and services swelled 12 per cent last year, driven mainly by imbalances with China, then India and to a lesser extent Mexico and Germany, with goods trade with Canada representing a comparably small fraction.
Trump’s team keeps citing such imbalances as the reason to renegotiate NAFTA, threaten the U.S.-Korea agreement, cancel American participation in the Trans-Pacific Partnership and increase trade actions against China.
One example came at the closing news conference of the last NAFTA round in Montreal, where U.S. trade czar Robert Lighthizer focused on the specific issue of the merchandise trade imbalance as the reason for renegotiating.


