Trade deficit widens to hit 16-month high
ECONOMIC REBOUND

Trade deficit widens to hit 16-month high

The Philippine trade deficit ballooned to its widest in 16 months in July as imports and exports bounced back from a month of contraction.

Preliminary data from the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) showed the trade-in-goods balance—the difference between exports and imports—amounted to a $4.87 billion deficit in July, increasing from the $4.32-billion shortfall recorded in the previous month and the $4.12 deficit in July last year.

This was the widest trade gap seen since the $5.02-billion deficit seen in March 2023.

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READ: July trade deficit widens to $4.87 billion – PSA

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For the first seven months, the trade gap narrowed by 5.8 percent to $29. 91 billion from a year ago.

Cid Terosa, senior economist at University of Asia and the Pacific, said that economic expansion since last year’s fourth quarter has led to a higher demand for imported goods.

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“Despite the weaker peso, which helped stimulate exports, demand for imported production inputs to produce goods and services required by an expanding economy was clearly more dominant,” Terosa said.

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Terosa expects the trade gap to widen further in the coming months, primarily driven by higher import demand amid a busy production period for the holidays.

Total sales of Philippine-made goods inched up by 0.1 percent year on year to $6.25 billion in July, a reversal from the 17.3- percent decline in June. However, the growth just matched what was seen last year. INQ

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TAGS: Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA), trade deficit

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