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Why this matters. The U.S. current-account deficit narrowed significantly in the fourth quarter.

Why this matters. The U.S. current-account deficit narrowed significantly in the fourth quarter.

It matters because MSM and Progressives want you to think that you have no idea about where your next meal will come from. So, I asked my leftist AI if this is true.

  • The current‑account deficit fell from $239.1B in Q3 to $190.7B in Q4.
  • That’s a $48.4B improvement, or 20.2%.
  • As a share of GDP, it dropped from 3.1% → 2.4%.
  • The main driver was a swing in primary income (Americans earning more on foreign investments than foreigners earned on U.S. assets).
  • A smaller goods‑trade deficit also helped.

These numbers come directly from the Commerce Department’s quarterly international transactions report.

🧠 Why this matters

The current account is the broadest measure of U.S. economic flows with the world — goods, services, investment income, and transfers. A narrowing deficit generally signals:

  • Stronger exports
  • Higher returns on U.S. investments abroad
  • Lower payments to foreign holders of U.S. assets
  • Reduced goods imports

In Q4, the big story was the income balance flipping from deficit to surplus, which is unusual given the U.S. has a deeply negative net international investment position.

🧾 Bottom line

Yes — the claim is true.  

Winning