http://blogs.marketwatch.com/capitolreport/2013/08/06/surging-u-s-oil-production-keeps-lid-on-trade-deficit/?mod=MW_home_latest_news
All that U.S. shale oil has significantly improved the U.S. trade picture.
The nation’s trade deficit ballooned to nearly $70 billion a month in
2006, but the gap has remained considerably lower since then thanks in
no small part to soaring production of domestic petroleum.
In June, the difference between how much petroleum the U.S. imports and exports in dollar terms fell to its lowest level in almost four years: $17.4 billion. The gap had leaped to a record $42.4 billion just five years earlier.
The picture looks similarly bright in inflation-adjusted terms. The
so-called real oil deficit shrank to $11.4 billion in June vs. a high of
$24.1 billion in 2005, using a three-month rolling average.
As you can see from the accompanying chart, U.S. exports of oil and
related products have quadrupled in the past eight years while imports
have fallen 30%.
The shale revolution, combined with the growing use of fuel-efficient
vehicles and other oil-saving technologies, is likely to further shrink
the U.S. trade gap in the years ahead.
No comments:
Post a Comment