US trade deficit hits $44.5 billion, biggest in 10 months
WASHINGTON — The U.S. trade deficit increased to the highest point in 10 months, driven up by a big rise in imports of oil and Chinese-made computers, cellphones and clothing.
The deficit rose to $44.5 billion in June, 8.7 per cent higher than a revised May deficit of $41 billion, the Commerce Department reported Friday. It was the biggest gap between what America sells abroad and what the country imports since a $44.6 billion deficit last August.
Exports, which have struggled this year because of the strong dollar and global weakness, edged up 0.3 per cent to $183.2 billion. Imports rose a faster 1.9 per cent to $227.7 billion, led by a 19.4 per cent jump in petroleum imports.
The politically sensitive deficit with China increased to $29.8 billion, the highest in seven months.


