China posted a record trade surplus of US$18.8 billion in
August, far exceeding the previous peak of US$14.6 billion the
previous month, according to the General Administration of
Customs.
The August surplus, the fourth consecutive monthly record, was
driven by a 32.8 percent jump in exports from a year earlier, which
outpaced the 24.6 percent rise in imports. August exports recorded
US$90.8 billion while imports were US$72 billion.
China posted a trade surplus of US$94.65 billion in the first
eight months, up 57 percent over the same period last year. Exports
rose nearly 26 percent to about US$600 billion while imports
reached US$505 billion, an increase of 21.6 percent.
Mei Xinyu, a trade researcher with the Chinese Academy of
International Trade and Economic Co-operation, said the August
record should not be a major surprise as there is no major change
in the external factors affecting overseas trade.
Many research reports and analysts forecast China's full-year
trade surplus to reach between US$140 billion and US$150 billion.
They agree that the appreciation of the currency is too small to
really affect the trade balance and there are simply no major
drivers for a major change in the trade balance this year.
The rising surplus is believed to pose a challenge on China's
strategy of letting the yuan rise gradually so exporters with small
profit margins have time to adjust.
(China Daily September 12, 2006)