
British exports to US suffer record hit from Trump tariffs
LONDON, June 12 (Reuters) - British goods exports to the United States suffered a record fall in April after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed new tariffs, official figures showed on Thursday, pushing Britain's goods trade deficit to its widest in more than three years.
Britain exported 4.1 billion pounds ($5.6 billion) of goods to the United States in April, down from 6.1 billion pounds in March, Britain's Office for National Statistics said, the lowest amount since February 2022 and the sharpest decline since monthly records began in 1997.
The 2 billion pound fall - a 33% drop in percentage terms - contributed to a bigger-than-expected drop in British gross domestic product in April.
Last week Germany said its exports to the United States fell by 10.5% in April although that figure, unlike Britain's, is seasonally adjusted.
The British Chambers of Commerce said the scale of the fall partly reflected manufacturers shipping extra goods in March to avoid an expected increase in tariffs. Even so, April's goods exports were 15% lower than a year earlier.
"The economic effects of the U.S. tariffs are now a reality. Thousands of UK exporters are dealing with lower orders and higher supply chain and customer costs," the BCC's head of trade policy, William Bain, said.
The United States is Britain's largest single goods export destination and is especially important for car makers, although total British exports to countries in the European Union are higher.
Britain exported 59.3 billion pounds of goods to the United States last year and imported 57.1 billion pounds.
The United States imposed 25% tariffs on British steel and aluminium on March 12 and in early April increased tariffs on imports of cars to 27.5% as well as a blanket tariff of 10% on other goods.
Last month Britain agreed the outline of a deal to remove the extra tariffs on steel, aluminium and cars - the only country to do so - but it has yet to be implemented and the 10% tariff remains in place for other goods.
Before the deal, the Bank of England estimated the impact of the tariffs on Britain would be relatively modest, reducing economic output by 0.3% in three years' time.
Thursday's data also showed that the fall in exports to the United States pushed Britain's global goods trade deficit to 23.2 billion pounds in April from 19.9 billion pounds in March, its widest since January 2022 and nearly 3 billion pounds more than had been expected by economists polled by Reuters.
Excluding trade in precious metals, which the ONS says adds volatility to the data, the goods trade deficit was the widest since May 2023 at 21.6 billion pounds.
Britain's total trade deficit narrowed to 5.4 billion pounds in April - also the widest since May 2023 - once the country's surplus in services exports is taken into account.
($1 = 0.7364 pounds)
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