Trade Deficit

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Trade deficit has been a concern for a very long time. It is the total of goods and services that are imported by the United States and is greater than the total it exports. The United States deficit was around $5399.514 billion in 2012, exports in the amount of $2.194 trillion and minus imports of $2.734. The United States depends on foreign oil to drive the trade deficit. Consumer products, drugs, consumer electronics, household goods, furniture and clothing is a large contributor to the trade deficit. In 2012 the United States imported $298 billion worth of trucks, auto parts, and cars, while they only exported $146 billion, which ran a deficit of $152 billion ("US Trade Deficit", n.d., p. 1).
A net exporter of services is the United States, and they exported $630.4 billion and only $434.6 billion was imported. This causes a trade surplus in services of $195.8 billion. Trade deficits weakens the economy, especially over a long period, for it is a debt that is financed. What this means is, the United States buys more than it makes because the countries that it buys from lends them the money.
Key Term and Why I Am Interested In It
Trade deficit is defined as “an unfavorable balance of trade that is the excess of imports of goods (raw materials, agricultural and manufactured products, and capital and consumer products) over the exports of goods, resulting in a negative balance of trade. Factors that affect a country’s balance of trade include the strength or weakness of its currency value in relation to those of the countries with which it trades and comparative advantage in key manufacturing areas”( Trade Deficit, 1995).
I am interested in the term trade deficit because I want to understand how it affects the United States and o...

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... to the debate, and concludes his paper with the discussion of the burden of a trade account deficit.
(Batra & Beladi, 2013) explains that it is well known to that nations that have high trade deficits have higher interest rates than those with balanced trade or surplus. They explain that this is now what has been happening with the United States, which has had a bad trade deficit since 1982. The United States interest rates have been lower than those in several other trade-surplus nations, however the rates did fall even as the trade “shortfall” went up. This generated an interest rate “paradox”. Batra & Beladi, also explains that unlike other nations, the trade deficit that continues to rise is the cause of lower United States interest rates and it happened because of the “world’s strong interest in maintaining a high value of the dollar” (Batra & Beladi, 2013).

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