
The US goods trade deficit widened to a 14-month high in May as imports surged and exports fell, according to the topic provided. But the required source article could not be fetched, so no further factual detail, figures, quotes, or named institutions are available to report without inventing information.
What Can Be Verified
The only available fact is that the US goods trade deficit widened in May, reaching a 14-month high, while imports surged and exports fell. That is the extent of the source material provided here.
Limits of the Available Record
The source URL listed for the Reuters article could not be fetched, and the base article text itself states that the required source URL could not be retrieved. Because of that, there are no additional names, numbers, quotes, or policy details available to include. To avoid adding anything not present in the source, this article cannot responsibly expand beyond the basic trade-deficit fact supplied in the topic line.
Why This Matters
Trade deficits are usually discussed as abstract numbers, but they are produced by decisions made far above ordinary people, inside the machinery of state and corporate power. In this case, however, the missing source prevents any factual account of who made those decisions, who benefited, or who paid the price. The only confirmed movement is the widening gap itself: imports up, exports down, and another monthly record of imbalance in the books.
Without the underlying article, there is no verified basis for claims about causes, responses, or consequences. The record available here is too thin to support anything more than that.