Trade deficit narrows for 7th month in row
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WASHINGTON - The US trade deficit plunged unexpectedly in February as the recession pushed imports down for a seventh straight month while exports rebounded a bit. Analysts said the smaller trade gap is fresh evidence the economy's downward spiral may be easing.
The Commerce Department said yesterday the deficit dropped 28.3 percent to $25.97 billion, the smallest gap since November 1999.
Some said the better-than-expected performance, along with stronger consumer spending, could lead to a decline in the overall economy of less than 5 percent in the first quarter. That would be an improvement from the 6.3 percent plunge in the gross domestic product recorded in the fourth quarter, the steepest drop since 1982.
"Things are still bad, but less bad than before, which is good in this environment," said Sal Guatieri, senior economist BMO Capital Markets.
Stronger sales for consumer goods - including pharmaceutical products, autos, food, and beverages - led the strength in exports, which posted the first increase after six straight declines. But analysts cautioned against reading too much into the gain, which they said likely was a blip given sustained weakness in the global economy.
"The rebound in exports will be temporary because we are still struggling with the fact that the dollar is stronger than it used to be and the world is weaker than it used to be. Both of those factors are going to hurt exports," said David Wyss, chief economist at Standard & Poor's.
The politically sensitive deficit with China dropped 31 percent to $18.9 billion in February, but remains the largest trade gap with any country. America's deficit with Japan fell to $2.2 billion, the lowest level since December 1984.
The deficit with Canada, America's biggest trading partner, dropped to $1.82 billion, the lowest level since December 1998.![]()



