The morning after President Barack Obama issued an executive order expelling 35 Russian officials from the U.S., shutting down U.S.-based Russian compounds and sanctioning Russian intelligence services, his counterpart in Moscow, President Vladimir Putin, appearing to lean on expectations of improved relations with the incoming administration, said he would not retaliate.
While these sanctions predominantly concern security officials and entities, previous penalties against Russia—for its annexation of Crimea and its downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17—have targeted Russia’s economy and business leaders, providing ample room for improvement in Russian-American trade relations.
The U.S. has long held a trade deficit with Russia, meaning it has imported more goods than it has exported, but that deficit has dropped over the past five years, from $26.3 billion in 2011 to just $6.7 billion as of October 2016, according to data from the Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security, as well as more recent data from the U.S. Census Bureau.
Both imports and exports have also declined over the same period, with the value of products coming to the U.S. from Russia falling by two-thirds, to $11.7 billion from $34.6 billion in 2011, and products shipped to Russia from the U.S. declining by about 40 percent, to just under $5 billion from $8.3 billion, over the same period, according to the two bureaus.
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