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The Dollar and the U.S. Trade Deficit


February 14, 2020


Since taking office, the Trump Administration has used the
overall and bilateral U.S. trade deficits as one of its
barometers for evaluating the success or failure of the
global trading system, U.S. trade policy, and trade
agreements. In an effort to reduce the trade deficit and for
other policy objectives, the Administration has renegotiated
existing trade agreements, withdrawn from or suspended
negotiations on other trade agreements, initiated new
agreements, and placed tariffs on a range of imports.
Previous administrations and Members of Congress, while
expressing concern, have not legislated policies specifically
to reduce the trade deficit.

The Trump Administration also has advocated for
depreciating the dollar against other major currencies,
reasoning that a weaker dollar would increase U.S. exports
and reduce the nation's trade deficit. Additionally, the
Administration contends that certain countries are
manipulating their currencies to give their exports a price
advantage. On February 3, 2020, the Commerce
Department issued a rule that allows currency manipulation
potentially to be considered as a domestic subsidy under
U.S. countervailing duty laws. The International Monetary
Fund (IMF) concluded in its July 2019 report on external
balances that current accounts and currencies may be under-
or over-valued at times, but this largely reflected domestic
economic policies. Economists have raised concerns about
the broader long-term impact on the U.S. economy of
financing trade deficits.


Changes in exchange rates can affect trade balances through
changes in export and import prices and through changes in
asset prices and income flows. Most economists argue that
the U.S. trade deficit is largely the product of a low national
savings rate, attributed in part to U.S. macroeconomic
policy, or the combination of fiscal policy notably large
and persistent federal government budget deficits and
monetary policy. This combination of policies determines
the overall national saving-investment balance, which
determines the inward and outward flows of funds that
affect the value of the dollar and the U.S. trade balance.

Most economists argue that attempting to alter the current
account balance (comprised of trade in goods, services, and
official flows) and, by implication the trade deficit, without
addressing the underlying macroeconomic conditions,
likely will be counterproductive and create distortions in the
economy. Also, most economists contend that, absent
changes in the underlying macroeconomic conditions,
targeting individual bilateral trade balances most likely will
result in trade diversion and offsetting changes in trade
balances with other partners, without altering the overall


trade deficit. Most economists also argue that attempting to
alter the long-run exchange rate of the dollar that differs
from its market price is difficult to sustain.

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Exchange rates reflect the relative prices of currencies, and
changes in those rates can affect trade flows by changing
export and import prices. As a result, an appreciation in the
dollar relative to other currencies raises the dollar-
denominated prices of U.S. exports. In contrast, a
depreciation in the dollar would have the opposite effect:
export prices would fall and import prices would rise.

Under the current system of floating exchange rates,
extensive cross border capital flows, and the role of the
dollar as the dominant global currency, financial
transactions are a major factor affecting exchange rates and
current account balances. The balance of payments is a
system of off-setting accounts. Under this arrangement, a
surplus or deficit in the current account is offset by an equal
transaction in the capital account, which is comprised of
foreign deposits in U.S. banks, foreign purchases of U.S.
businesses and real estate, and foreign purchases of U.S.
government and corporate debt and equities. For some
analysts, the ability of the U.S. economy to finance its trade
deficits through such capital inflows reduces the constraint
of domestic savings.

Most capital account assets are highly liquid and
transactions respond rapidly to political and economic
events and instantaneously transmit market signals across
national borders. As a result, shifts in the capital account in
response to market events can drive movements in the
exchange rate which, in turn, can affect the current account
and the trade balance. From this perspective, efforts to
devalue the dollar likely would have an immediate impact
on capital flows and investor's expectations that could
blunt, or offset entirely, the intended change in the dollar's
exchange rate.


Currently, the dollar effectively serves as the dominant
global currency. As such, the international value of the
dollar reflects a broad range of international and domestic
economic activities that can far outweigh the size of
domestic trade balances alone. On a daily basis, the value of
global foreign exchange transactions eclipses the total
global value of economic output and the value of all traded
stocks and bonds. According to a recent survey, the dollar
accounts for 88% of daily global foreign exchange market
turnover of $6.6 trillion, or four times the annual amount of
U.S. exports of goods and services. The volume of dollar
turnover reflects its wide range of uses in international
financial transactions, including two-thirds of global central


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