The gaping US trade gap: A sign of weakness? Not necessarily
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump ripped into one of his favourite targets Thursday in Beijing: The United States’ “shockingly” large trade deficit with China.
“I blame past administrations,” Trump declared, “for allowing this out-of-control deficit to take place and grow.”
America’s lopsided trade relationship with China and with the rest of the world is a familiar theme for Trump and his economic team. They’ve branded trade deficits a mark of economic weakness — even shame — that depress growth and kill jobs.
Yet most economists say their ire is misplaced. They reject the notion that trade is a zero-sum game in which victory goes to the countries that run a trade surplus by exporting more than they import.