Despite falling oil imports and crude prices, the US trade deficit saw its biggest jump in three months, increasing 5.2 percent or $2.3 billion compared to March to $46.7 billion.
The consecutive increases in the deficit come as the Trump administration presses ahead with a nationalist trade agenda, making the elimination of bilateral trade deficits a central goal of economic policy.
President Donald Trump this week made the US trade deficit with Germany a bone of contention and the administration is reviewing trade agreements with an eye to correcting imbalances, including renegotiating the landmark North American Free Trade Agreement.
In addition to the increased deficit in April, the Commerce Department also revised the March trade deficit up by $1.6 billion. For the first four months of the year, the deficit increased $22.1 billion or 13.4 percent from the same period of 2016.
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Exports to South Korea were the highest on record at $4.4 billion, while exports to Japan were near a three-year high at $6 billion.
The widening trade gap caused analysts to knock down their forecasts for economic expansion in the second quarter.
"If sustained in May/June, the April level would result in net exports subtracting about 0.5 points from the real GDP growth rate" for the second quarter, Jim O'Sullivan of High Frequency Economics said in a client note.
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