US trade deficit falls for second straight month in April
WASHINGTON — Record exports shaved the U.S. trade deficit in April for the second straight month. But so far this year, the deficit is up 11.5 per cent from a year ago despite President Donald Trump’s vow to close the gap through new tariffs on imports and renegotiated trade deals.
The Commerce Department said Wednesday that the trade deficit dropped to $46.2 billion in April, down from $47.2 billion in March and lowest since September. Exports edged up 0.3 per cent to a record $211.2 billion; imports dipped 0.2 per cent to $257.4 billion.
The United States ran a $68.3 billion deficit in the trade of goods. That was partly offset by a $22.1 billion surplus in trade of services such as tourism and banking.
The trade deficit in goods with China widened 8.1 per cent to $28 billion in April; the monthly gap with Mexico narrowed 29.8 per cent to $5.7 billion.


