Foreign trade grows 9.1% despite US tariffs

CHINA’S foreign trade registered steady growth in the first eight months of this year despite higher tariffs imposed by the United States, according to official data.To get more chinese financial news, you can visit shine news official website.

China’s goods trade went up 9.1 percent year on year to 19.43 trillion yuan (US$2.8 trillion) in the first eight months of this year, the General Administration of Customs said.

Exports rose 5.4 percent year on year in the January-August period to 10.34 trillion yuan while imports grew 13.7 percent to 9.09 trillion yuan, resulting in a trade surplus of 1.25 trillion yuan, which narrowed by 31.3 percent, the customs said.

In August, exports rose by 7.9 percent, higher than 6 percent in July.

August’s data was widely watched as it was the first reading since fresh US tariffs on US$16 billion worth of Chinese imports went into effect from August 23.

China has responded with an equivalent retaliatory measure.

The move came after additional tariffs on US$34 billion worth of Chinese imports went into effect on July 6.

Saturday’s data showed that China’s exports have not deteriorated so far with strong export volume supporting total value, China Merchants Securities said in a research note.

The country’s trade with major trading partners saw an increase during the January-August period.

Trade with the European Union, its largest trading partner, climbed 6.2 percent, and trade volume with the US and ASEAN countries increased by 5.9 percent and 11.8 percent, respectively.

Trade with countries along the Belt and Road totaled 5.31 trillion yuan, increasing 12 percent from a year earlier, 2.9 percentage points faster than the average growth rate, data showed.

Saturday’s data also revealed a more balanced trade picture, with imports in August continuing the rapid expansion seen in previous months.

In August, imports jumped by 18.8 percent in yuan terms, slightly lower than the 20.9 percent rise seen in July.

China’s imports of consumer goods such as food and cosmetics have seen rapid growth since 2017, while domestic demand related to manufacturing investment remained robust, indicating that China’s imports are less relevant to infrastructure and real estate investment, China Merchants Securities said.

China has been seeking a more balanced trade pattern, with the introduction of a series of pro-import policies.

Earlier in July, China’s State Council released guidelines on expanding imports, promising tariff cuts, cleanups of unreasonable price markups, and better intellectual property rights protection.

Fast growth in imports has helped bring down China’s trade surplus, which stood almost flat in August compared with July in US dollar terms, China Merchants Securities said.

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