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U.S. Trade Deficit Widens To $48.3 Billion In August

The deficit increased 15.6 percent to $48.3 billion, the biggest deficit since March.

The U.S. trade deficit jumped sharply in August as exports fell to the lowest level in nearly three years while imports increased, led by a surge in shipments of cellphones from China.

The deficit increased 15.6 percent to $48.3 billion, the biggest deficit since March, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday. Exports of goods and services dropped 2 percent to $185.1 billion, the lowest level since October 2012, while imports rose 1.2 percent to $233.4 billion.

Exports have been hurt this year by the rising value of the dollar, which makes U.S. goods less competitive on overseas markets, and weaker economic growth in China and other major export markets. Economists say they expect these trends will combine to push the deficit higher and make trade a drag on overall growth this year.

Canada, America's largest trading partner, is in a recession and China, the world's second largest economy is growing much more slowly while many emerging market economies are being battered by a plunge in commodity prices.

Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, said that the August trade performance showed that trade will be a "significant drag" on growth in the just-completed July-September quarter. Shepherdson said he looked for trade to subtract 0.75 percentage point from third quarter growth.

The overall economy grew at a 3.9 percent rate in the second quarter but many analysts expect that trade and other factors will slow growth to perhaps as low as 1.5 percent in the third quarter.

The United States on Monday reached agreement with Japan and nine other Pacific Rim nations on what would be the largest regional trade pact in history. But the Obama administration will face a major challenge winning congressional approval for the Trans Pacific Partnership trade deal against opponents who argue that the agreement will expose American workers to more unfair foreign competition.

The critics point to America's huge trade deficits to bolster their argument that other nations are manipulating their currencies and pursuing other unfair trade practices that are costing U.S. jobs.

For August, the U.S. deficit with China rose 10.7 percent to $35 billion, the highest level in 11 months.

The deficit with the European Union rose 9 percent in August to $13.6 billion while the imbalance with Japan dipped 9 percent to $5.2 billion.

The drop in exports reflected lower sales of manufactured goods such as computers, industrial machinery and autos and a drop in exports of U.S. energy products, which fell 9.3 percent to $8.1 billion, reflecting the fall in oil prices.

The rise in imports reflected a $2.1 billion jump in the category that covers cellphones with many of those imports coming from China. Imports of telecommunications equipment and food products were also up but imports of oil dropped 11.7 percent to $15.1 billion.

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