logo
US trade gap skids to 2-year low; tariffs exert pressure on service sector

US trade gap skids to 2-year low; tariffs exert pressure on service sector

Time of Indiaa day ago
The U.S. trade deficit narrowed in June on a sharp drop in consumer goods imports, and the trade gap with
China
shrank to its lowest in more than 21 years, the latest evidence of the imprint on global commerce President
Donald Trump
is making with sweeping tariffs on imported goods.
Trump's tariffs are leaving their mark on the U.S. economy beyond trade, as a measure of activity in the vast services sector hit stall-speed in July, with businesses saying the swarm of new import taxes is driving up costs and making business planning more difficult.
Productivity Tool
Zero to Hero in Microsoft Excel: Complete Excel guide
By Metla Sudha Sekhar
View Program
Finance
Introduction to Technical Analysis & Candlestick Theory
By Dinesh Nagpal
View Program
Finance
Financial Literacy i e Lets Crack the Billionaire Code
By CA Rahul Gupta
View Program
Digital Marketing
Digital Marketing Masterclass by Neil Patel
By Neil Patel
View Program
Finance
Technical Analysis Demystified- A Complete Guide to Trading
By Kunal Patel
View Program
Productivity Tool
Excel Essentials to Expert: Your Complete Guide
By Study at home
View Program
Artificial Intelligence
AI For Business Professionals Batch 2
By Ansh Mehra
View Program
The overall trade gap narrowed 16.0% in June to $60.2 billion, the
Commerce Department
's Bureau of Economic Analysis said on Tuesday. Days after reporting that the goods trade deficit tumbled 10.8% to its lowest since September 2023, the government said the full deficit including services also was its narrowest since then.
Exports of goods and services totaled $277.3 billion, down from more than $278 billion in May, while total imports were $337.5 billion, down from $350.3 billion. Imports of consumer goods and industrial supplies and materials were both the lowest since the middle of the COVID-19 pandemic, while exports of capital goods hit a record high.
The diminished trade deficit contributed heavily to the rebound in U.S. gross domestic product during the second quarter, reported last week, reversing a drag in the first quarter when imports had surged as consumers and businesses front-loaded purchases to beat the imposition of Trump's tariffs.
Live Events
The economy in the second quarter expanded at a 3.0% annualized rate after contracting at a 0.5% rate in the first three months of the year, but the headline figure masked underlying indications that activity was weakening.
Last week Trump, ahead of a self-imposed deadline of August 1, issued a barrage of notices informing scores of trading partners of higher import taxes set to be imposed on their goods exports to the U.S.
With tariff rates ranging from 10% to 41% on imports to the U.S. set to kick in on August 7, the Budget Lab at Yale now estimates the average overall U.S. tariff rate has shot up to 18.3%, the highest since 1934, from between 2% and 3% before
Trump
returned to the
White House
in January.
"Last week's trade announcement reduced policy uncertainty, but businesses hoping tariffs were just threats must now adjust to the reality they are here to stay,"
Nationwide Financial Markets
Economist Oren Klachkin said in a note. "We think the negative impact of high tariff rates will outweigh any positives from lower policy uncertainty."
CHINA TRADE GAP
A centerpiece of Tuesday's report was the latest steep drop in the U.S. trade deficit with China, which tumbled by roughly a third to $9.5 billion in June to its narrowest since February 2004. Over five consecutive months of declines, it has narrowed by $22.2 billion - a 70% reduction.
U.S. and China trade negotiators met last week in Sweden in the latest round of engagement over the trade war that has intensified since Trump's return. The U.S. currently imposes a 30% tariff on most Chinese imports, which have fueled a steep drop-off in inbound goods traffic from China. Imports from China dropped to $18.9 billion, the lowest since 2009.
The trade negotiators have recommended that Trump extend an August 12 deadline for the current tariff rate to expire and snap back to more than 100%, where it had briefly been earlier this year after a round of tit-for-tat increases by both sides.
"We're getting very close to a deal," Trump said Tuesday in an interview on
CNBC
. "We're getting along with China very well."
The deficit with China was not the only one to narrow. Amid a continuing impasse on trade talks with Canada and hefty tariffs imposed on autos, steel and aluminum, the trade gap with the United States' northern neighbor was the smallest in nearly five years at $1.3 billion.
The trade deficit with Germany also slid, coming in at $3.8 billion and the lowest in five years. But a pair of key Asian trading partners - Taiwan and Vietnam - both posted record surpluses.
SERVICES SECTOR SOFTENING
The tariff effects showed signs last month of spilling over into the domestic services sector, which accounts for roughly two-thirds of total U.S. economic activity. Business activity unexpectedly flatlined in July with little change in orders and a further weakening in employment even as input costs climbed by the most in nearly three years, underscoring the ongoing drag on businesses from tariff policy uncertainty.
The Institute for Supply Management's nonmanufacturing purchasing managers index slipped to 50.1 last month from 50.8 in June. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the services
PMI
would rise to 51.5. A PMI reading above 50 indicates growth in the services sector, which accounts for more than two-thirds of the economy.
The survey's measure of services employment fell to 46.4, the lowest level since March, from 47.2 in June. It has indicated contraction in four of the last five months, and the reading followed the release last week of the
Labor Department
's surprisingly soft U.S. employment report.
Price pressures, meanwhile, continue to mount. The survey's prices paid index rose to 69.9, the highest level since October 2022, from 67.5 in June.
Inflation until now has largely remained moderate because businesses have been selling merchandise accumulated before import duties came into effect, but data last week showed prices in some categories of goods like home furnishings and recreational gear have begun rising briskly.
More benign inflation from the services sector has helped keep overall inflation in check, but the
ISM
data brings into question whether that trend will continue or further fan concerns about the emergence of stagflation.
Respondents to the ISM survey frequently mentioned tariffs as a drag. "Trade uncertainty causing client reevaluation of feasibility for projects in certain sectors, resulting in some delays or cancellations," a respondent from the construction sector said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Despite war and warnings, US traded more with Russia than ally Ukraine
Despite war and warnings, US traded more with Russia than ally Ukraine

India Today

time21 minutes ago

  • India Today

Despite war and warnings, US traded more with Russia than ally Ukraine

United States President Donald Trump on August 6 announced an additional tariff of 25 per cent on India, taking the total to 50 per cent, making tariffs on India one of the highest in the tariffs, as per Trump, are a sanction against India for importing fuel from Russia. Trump alleges that India, by doing this, has been financing the Russian invasion of data by the US Census Bureau presents a different picture.A deep dive into the monthly trade data of the US with Russia and Ukraine reveals that the US has been doing more trade with Russia than it is with since the war began in February 2022, the US-Russia total trade has stood at USD 25.233 billion, while the trade with Ukraine stands at a mere USD 9.69 we merely look at import data for the two nations, as Trump's major concern is India financing Russia through imports, we see a trend that exposes US hypocrisy. In 2022, US imports from Russia stood at USD 14.43 billion, while imports from Ukraine stood at $1.503 billion In 2023, US imports from Russia stood at USD 4.57 billion, while imports from Ukraine fell to USD 1.39 billion In 2024, US imports from Russia stood at USD 3 billion, while imports from Ukraine stood at USD 1.17 billion In 2025, till June, US imports from Russia stood at USD 2billion while imports from Ukraine stood at merely USD 769 trend is clear, in terms of imports. Even though substantially reduced, the US continues to buy from Russia more than it does from all, the US has imported goods worth over USD 22 billion from Russia, ever since Ukraine was attacked, while has only imported goods worth USD 4 billion in the same time period from we take a look at the percentage increase in Indian trade cooperation with Ukraine, when it comes to Ukrainian imports to India, since the the war began during FY 2021-22, India imported USD 3.38 billion worth of goods from Ukraine, as per data published by the Indian Embassy in Kyiv, while in 2024-25 this data stood at USD 1.2 billion, which stands more than what the US buys from the war-torn the data is clear: While the US has accused India of arming and financing the Russian war, it is the US which is financing Russia more than it is financing Ukraine through trade, while India is balancing its partnership without taking a side and without financing any one side.- EndsTune InMust Watch

Trump delivers a steady stream of wins for his conservative Christian base
Trump delivers a steady stream of wins for his conservative Christian base

New Indian Express

time21 minutes ago

  • New Indian Express

Trump delivers a steady stream of wins for his conservative Christian base

In his first half-year in office — amid his tariff campaign, government-slashing moves and immigration crackdown — President Donald Trump has also repeatedly delivered for conservative Christians, who form the bedrock of his Republican support. While he has made overtures to Jewish, Muslim and other religious groups, his Christian supporters have been among his most high-profile surrogates and appointees. The Trump administration has green-lit political endorsements from the pulpit and encouraged religion in the federal workplace. Trump has established faith-focused entities with numerous influential Christian appointees. He's energised supporters with assaults on cultural and academic targets long seen as liberal bastions. His administration and his Supreme Court appointees have expanded areas for religious exemptions and expression in the public square. "We're bringing back religion in our country," Trump contended at a Rose Garden event on the National Day of Prayer in May. His faith adviser, pastor Paula White-Cain, proclaimed that in his administration, faith "has been brought back to where it always belongs, and that is centre." Critics say he's eroding the separation of church and state. "The ones celebrating this are the ones leaning toward this Christian nationalist bent, this ideology that Christians should have dominion over the United States government," said the Rev. Shannon Fleck, executive director of Faithful America, a progressive Christian group. "A president with a true Christian agenda would be most concerned with uplifting those in our country who have been cast aside," she said. "The most vulnerable among us are not billionaires. Those most vulnerable among us are not these manipulators of Christianity that are seeking nothing but power."

Trump's tariffs on India and US–Russia trade: A double standard? What data reveals
Trump's tariffs on India and US–Russia trade: A double standard? What data reveals

Mint

time21 minutes ago

  • Mint

Trump's tariffs on India and US–Russia trade: A double standard? What data reveals

The Indian government and the country's top leaders called out the "double standards" of the United States and the European Union, which criticised India for buying oil from Russia. US President Donald Trump on August 6 imposed a 25 per cent additional tariff on India and also threatened penalties for doing trade with Russia 'at a time when everyone wants Russia to stop the killing in Ukraine'. With India's sharp response to Trump's "unjustified" and "unreasonable" tariff, the focus has now shifted to the trade the US itself does with Russia while condemning India for doing it. India said in a statement on August 4 that the US 'continues to import Russian uranium hexafluoride for use in its nuclear power industry, palladium, fertilisers and chemicals'. Congress MP Shashi Tharoor also pointed out that the US continues to import uranium, palladium and various other products from Russia. Notably, both the US and the EU have sharply scaled back their trade ties with Russia since it launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The US also banned oil imports from Russia in March 2022. However, they still import billions of euros worth of Russian energy and commodities, including liquefied natural gas and enriched uranium. According to the United States Census Bureau, US imports from Russia fell to around $2.50 billion in the first half of 2025 (June 2025) from $14.14 billion four years earlier. "In May 2025, the US exported $51.4 million and imported $540 million from Russia, resulting in a negative trade balance of $488 million," The Observatory of Economic Complexity (OEC) revealed. According to the United States Trade Representative, US goods and services trade with Russia totalled an estimated $5.2 billion in 2024 — down 25.8 per cent ($1.8 billion) from 2023. $3.5 billion: US total goods trade (exports plus imports) with Russia in 2024 $528.3 million: US goods exports to Russia in 2024 $3.0 billion: US goods imports from Russia 2024 $2.4 billion: US goods trade deficit with Russia in 2024 $1.6 billion: US total services trade (exports plus imports) with Russia in 2024 $1.3 billion: US services exports to Russia in 2024 $384 million: US services imports from Russia in 2024 $873 million: US services trade surplus with Russia in 2024 Source: According to OEC, in May 2025, the US' main imports from Russia were radioactive chemicals, nitrogenous fertilisers, and platinum ($122M). Here are key products the US reportedly imported from Russia in 2024, as per OEC data, Trading Economics and other reports: 1. Fertilisers/nitrogenous fertilisers: Fertilisers were the most-imported commodity to the US from Russia in the first 11 months of 2024, as per Statista. Last year, the US imported around $1.27 billion of Russian fertilisers, up slightly from $1.14 billion in 2021. 2. Radioactive chemicals: The US imported enriched uranium and plutonium from Russia worth around $624 million in 2024, down from $646 million in 2021. 3. Palladium: Russia exported palladium to the US for around $878 million in 2024, down from $1.59 billion in 2021, according to Reuters. Source: OEC Some other products imported by the US from Russia are: 1. Precious stones and metals 4. Wood and articles of wood 5. Nuclear reactors and machinery (HS code 84): $80.81 million 8. Aircraft, spacecraft & parts thereof 10. Oil seeds and oleaginous fruits The US recently imposed a whopping 50 per cent tariff on Indian product imports. US President Donald Trump even threatened unspecified penalties against India for buying Russian oil. India, meanwhile, justified buying Russian oil and said on Wednesday, "...our imports are based on market factors and done with the overall objective of ensuring the energy security of 1.4 billion people of India." Taking a dig at the US and the EU over "unjustified" and "unreasonable" targeting of India, the Ministry of External Affairs said that the "very nations" criticising the country for buying Russian oil are 'themselves indulging in trade with Russia.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store