The 78% deficit-cut claim is misleading cherry-picking monthly data
President Trump has asserted that tariffs reduced the U.S. trade deficit by about 78%, suggesting the country is nearing its first trade surplus in decades. According to FactCheck.org, the headline figure comes from comparing two isolated months in 2025, which exaggerates progress by substituting short-term noise for trend.
The report explains that monthly trade balances swing with timing effects such as import pull-forwards ahead of tariff changes, energy-price moves, seasonality, and inventory cycles. Evaluations using year-to-date or annual totals better capture direction and durability than two handpicked months.
As reported by CNBC, economists affiliated with the American Enterprise Institute have also questioned the tariff math behind such claims, noting that the “reciprocal” tariff formula understates how import volumes react to price changes and thus overstates expected effects. When elasticities are applied more realistically, modeled impacts on trade gaps appear materially smaller than advertised.
No evidence of a near-term U.S. goods-plus-services surplus
Based on data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis, the United States has recorded annual overall trade deficits (goods plus services) since the mid-1970s, with the last surplus in 1975. There is no official reading indicating a durable turn to surplus in the combined balance.
Even if monthly deficits narrowed at points late in 2025, that does not by itself establish a sustained shift; underlying forces such as domestic demand, the dollar’s level, and the national saving–investment balance typically shape the aggregate gap. Analysts caution against drawing sweeping conclusions from a handful of datapoints before trend confirmation.
“Monthly trade balance figures are extremely volatile … too soon to tell whether this is a permanent change … or simply reflecting the draw-down in inventories,” said Kyle Handley, associate professor at the University of California, San Diego.
Goods versus services change the U.S. trade balance picture
The composition of trade matters for interpreting the headline balance. According to English.news.cn, the U.S. posted an estimated $293 billion services trade surplus in 2024, which partially offsets the larger deficit in goods.
That services cushion improves the overall picture but does not, on its own, flip the national ledger into surplus while the merchandise gap remains wider. Without a broad and persistent shift in both goods and services flows, the combined balance is likely to remain in deficit in the near term.
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