With the close of 2025, the United States has run 50 consecutive years of annual trade deficits. Should we Americans despair? No.
As regular patrons of Cafe Hayek know, a common complaint about U.S. trade deficits is that these deficits – said to be ‘funded’ by a combination of Americans going further into debt to foreigners and Americans selling off assets to foreigners – drain wealth from America. As regular patrons of Cafe Hayek also know, this Cafe’s proprietor never tires of reminding people that, although some part of U.S. trade deficits might be caused by Americans borrowing money from, or selling assets to, foreigners, rising U.S. trade deficits do not necessarily mean increasing American indebtedness or that we Americans are selling our assets to foreigners.
In earlier posts I’ve reported on data that belie the assertion that U.S. trade deficits necessarily drain wealth from the U.S. Here I report such data that are more complete – specifically, I count as part of Americans’ liabilities not only our private debt but also that portion of federal-, state-, and local-government debt for which the average American household is liable. Here are the conclusions, with all dollars converted into 2025$ using this personal-consumption-expenditure deflator.
In Q3 2025 (the latest date for which all relevant data are available), the average real net worth of U.S. households – taking account of all outstanding debt issued by federal, state, and local governments – was $1,031,144.
Expressed in 2025 dollars:
In 2001 (Q3), the quarter before China joined the World Trade Organization, the average real net worth of U.S. households was $583,989.
In 1993 (Q4), the quarter before NAFTA took effect, the average real net worth of U.S. households was $424,630.
At the end of 1975 – that is, in Q4 1975 – the last year the U.S. ran an annual trade surplus, the average real net worth of U.S. households was $339,074.
Therefore, in Q3 2025, the average real net worth of U.S. households was:
– 77% higher than it was in 2001
– 143% higher than it was in 1994
– 204% higher than it was in 1975.
Note that I do not include among households’ assets their share of the market value of government-owned assets. Were I to do so, I doubt that the percentage changes over the years in the average real net worth of U.S. households would be much different from the figures reported above.
The bottom line is that because wealth can – and, when markets are reasonably free, does – grow, a country that consistently runs trade deficits does not necessarily thereby lose wealth. Indeed, trade deficits – representing, as they do, net inflows into the country of global capital – can help to increase the wealth of the nation. The data in the U.S. are consistent with this optimistic take on U.S. trade deficits.
Details on how I calculated these figures are below the fold.
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