China's foreign trade volume neared US$1 trillion in the first
seven months of 2006, with the gap narrowing between import and
export growth rates.
The country's imports and exports reached US$941.9 billion from
January to July, a year-on-year rise of 23.1 percent, according to
statistics published by the General Administration of Customs.
Imports stood at US$508.9 billion in this period, while exports
hit U$433 billion. The gap between the growth rates narrowed to 3.7
percentage points from 3.9 percentage points in the first six
months of the year.
However, the country's monthly trade surplus increased slightly
to another record of US$14.6 billion in July.
Exports reached US$80.3 billion last month, up 22.6 percent
year-on-year, while imports stood at US$65.7 billion, up 19.7
percent from the previous year.
Experts predicted that central government policies would help
balance trade, but they also agreed that the high trade surplus
could not be tackled in the short term.
In order to further narrow the gap, China will boost imports,
loosen controls on capital outflows and make the yuan more
flexible, the central bank said.
"Going forward, we expect the growth in imports to moderate
somewhat as the effects of China's policy tightening kick in. We
also foresee the growth in exports to moderate with the slowdown in
the growth of US demand," said Liang Hong, an economist at Goldman
Sachs Asia.
However, she believed that the trade surplus was likely to
remain large against this backdrop.
She was echoed by Zhai Zhihong, a director of the National
Bureau of Statistics, who said that the country's trade surplus may
top US$100 billion again this year as overseas firms build
export-oriented factories in China.
Zhai attributed the widening surplus to the processing trade
instead of weak domestic demand, which was seen by some as a major
reason for the trade surplus.
Exports and imports in the processing trade hit US$442.2 billion
in the first seven months of the year, accounting for nearly half
of the total trade volume.
The European Union remained China's largest trade partner, with
a bilateral trade volume of US$143.5 billion in the first seven
months.
It was followed by the United States, Japan and member economies
of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.
Guangdong Province, Jiangsu Province and Shanghai came out on
top in terms of foreign trade, accounting for nearly 60 percent of
the country's total.
(China Daily August 11, 2006)