China's foreign
trade reached a record $1.76 trillion last year accompanied by the
trade surplus widening to $177.5 billion, according to official
figures.
Despite this, experts predict that the
equivalent growth in 2007 will stand at a modest 15 percent and 13
percent for the trade volume and the surplus respectively, compared
with 23.8 percent and 74 percent for last year.
Exports in 2006 rose 27 percent year-on-year to $969
billion with imports climbing 20 percent to $791.6 billion, the
General Administration of Customs said yesterday.
Overall, export growth dropped 1.2 percentage points
from 2005 while imports climbed 2.4 percentage points.
The total trade volume grew 23.8 percent from a year
earlier, making it five years in a row where this figure has stood
above 20 percent.
Trade with each of China’s top three partners, the
European Union, the United States and Japan, exceeded $20
billion.
The surplus widened to a record $177.5 billion in
2006, up 74 percent from a year earlier. A countrywide breakdown is
not yet available.
As it attempts to counter the mounting pressure of
increased loans caused by the trade surplus, the central bank
ordered commercial banks to increase their reserves from January 1
for the fourth time in seven months.
The regulator may be pushed to this move another four
to five times this year, reports said.
The record trade surplus last year also led to renewed
calls from the US and the EU for Beijing to take measures to
balance trade.
However, Chinese economists have already predicted the
country's trade surplus is not likely to see a dramatic reduction
this year given China’s strength as a global manufacturing center.
However, the annual surplus growth could slow, given the
government's policies to restrict exports and encourage
imports.
Despite the dazzling growth in the trade volume,
traders are now facing "worsened" trading conditions, Customs
Director Mu Xinsheng said in a recent interview.
He explained that export costs keep increasing not
only because of price increases in resources, labor and land but
also due to the renminbi appreciation which would contribute to
blunting the competitive edge of "Made-in-China"
products.
The nation is also the biggest victim of international
trade protectionism since developed countries have imposed a number
of dumping charges and erected technical trade barriers against
Chinese products.
"It will be more difficult for Chinese exporters to
enlarge their market share in some major developed markets, such as
the US and the EU, during the country's 11th Five-Year Plan
(2006-10)," Mu said.
The Ministry of Commerce has predicted the country's
trade volume would grow by 15 percent to $2 trillion this
year.
The ministry stressed that although China is seeing
big surpluses in the trade of manufactured goods, it suffers from a
trade deficit in the service industry which increased by 44 percent
year-on-year to $5.7 billion in the first six months of last
year.
(China Daily January 11,
2007)
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