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Trade Deficit Narrows as Tariff Fallout Grows

Trade Deficit Narrows as Tariff Fallout Grows

Is the shrinking trade gap a sign of strength—or warning of something deeper? The U.S. trade deficit hit a two-year low, falling 16% to $60.2 billion in June. Imports dropped sharply as companies and consumers front-loaded purchases earlier this year to get ahead of Trump’s waves of new tariffs—now averaging a steep 18.3%, the highest since 1934. The U.S.-China trade gap, a perennial flashpoint, shrank to its smallest in 21 years after U.S. imports from China plunged to lows not seen since 2009.

While a lower trade deficit pumped up Q2 GDP to 3%, this is less about a manufacturing renaissance and more about cooling demand and trade reshuffling. Export growth also stalled. Critically, with another tariff deadline looming, nations are racing to cut last-minute deals, and businesses are bracing: import costs are up, and future demand looks bumpy. The upshot? Volatility in global commerce is the new status quo.

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