Trump Dealt Blow as US Trade Deficit Jumps

The US trade
gap with the rest of the world jumped to a 10-year high of $621bn (£472.5bn)
last year, dealing a blow to President Donald Trump's deficit reduction plan.
The trade
deficit is the difference between how much goods and services the US imports
from other countries and how much it exports.
Reducing the
gap is a key plank of Mr Trump's policies.
But in 2018,
the US exported fewer goods compared with how much it bought.
Mr Trump
claims that the US is being "ripped off" by other nations and wants
countries to lower their tariffs on US goods and buy more of them.
However,
official data shows that while exports of US goods and services rose by
$148.9bn last year, imports jumped by $217.7bn.
It means
that the gap is the widest since 2008, when the global financial crisis hit and
the US fell into recession.
The US is
currently locked in a trade battle with China over what it claims are unfair
trade practices, resulting in tit-for-tat tariff increases on each others'
goods.
Both nations
are in discussions and there is speculation they could reach an agreement by
the end of March.
New data
shows that the trade gap between the US and China widened last year by $43.6bn
to $419.2bn as exports of American products and services fell, but imports from
China rose.
Mr Trump
warned in December that if the two countries failed to reach an agreement on
trade, he would take action, dubbing himself "a Tariff Man".
FROM .bbc.com/news/business-
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