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Why limit it to merchandise? Also, why limit it to one country? If you have 3 countries, they can all maintain a balance of trade while being out of balance with each individual country.
A imports 100 units from B. B imports one hundred units from C. C imports 100 units from A.
In the above example, each country imports and exports 100 units. However, A has a 100% trade deficit with respect to B. If you look at only one country, you get a meaningless result.
B B B But it's a win win for everybody!
Why limit it to merchandise? Also, why limit it to one country? If you have 3 countries, they can all maintain a balance of trade while being out of balance with each individual country.
Our net trade deficit:
And it gets worse every year. Free Trade sucks.
B-b-but, the old economy had too much debt, we have to reduce debt! And taxes! And let companies get larger and merge to compete:
Ford to City: Drop Dead. Bankers to America: Borrow to Death
I want to find the NYC 1970s debt to GDP ratio.
www.youtube.com/embed/Rkgx1C_S6ls
And you thought that giant sucking sound was Monica.
If the President is creating a shit load of good paying jobs and not pushing the boundaries towards nuclear war, he could have orgies with Furry-fetish Transvestites on live TV for all I care.
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/terence-p-jeffrey/us-completes-22-straight-years-merchandise-trade-deficits-mexico
(CNSNews.com) The United States ran a merchandise trade deficit of $5,243,300,000 with Mexico in September, according to newly released data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
That completes 22 straight years in which the United States has run monthly merchandise trade deficits with Mexico.
The last time the United States ran a merchandise trade surplus with Mexico was September 1994—when the U.S. ran a $4,700,000 bilateral surplus with its southern neighbor.
The U.S. Census Bureau has published monthly figures on the export and import of goods to and from Mexico going back to January 1985. In the 31 complete calendar years that have passed since then (1985 through 2015), the United States has run merchandise trade surpluses with Mexico in four years and deficits in 27 years.
Three of those years—1991,1992,1993—were before the North American Free Trade Agreement took effect. The fourth year the United States ran a merchandise trade deficit with Mexico—1994—was the first year NAFTA took effect.
September 1994 was the last month that the United States ran a monthly merchandise trade surplus with Mexico. Two months before that, in July 1994, the U.S. ran a $592,700,000 merchandise trade surplus with Mexico. One month before that, in August 1994, the U.S. ran a $99,700,000 merchandise trade surplus with Mexico.
But the next month--October 1994--the United States ran a $81,600,000 merchandise trade deficit with Mexico.
Since then, the United States has not run a merchandise trade surplus with Mexico in any single month.
Prior to 1991, the U.S. ran up a 45-month stretch of merchandise trade deficits with Mexico, running from January 1985 through September 1988. That string was broken when the U.S. ran a merchandise trade surplus with Mexico of $49,100,000 in October 1988.
The House and Senate approved the NAFTA in 1993 and President Bill Clinton signed it in December 1993.
In the years since NAFTA took effect, bilateral trade between the United States and Mexico has increased, but in every month after September 1994, the value of the goods that the United States imported from Mexico has exceeded the value of the good the United States exported to Mexico. As of September 2016, the U.S. had run merchandise trade deficits with Mexico for 264 straight months.
In 1994, the U.S. merchandise trade surplus with Mexico was $1,349,800,000. In 2015, the U.S. merchandise trade deficit with Mexico was $60,662,8000.
In the first nine months of 2016 (January through September), the U.S. merchandise trade deficit with Mexico has been $46,811,500,000.
#nafta #clinton #trade #jobs #perot