Global Times

China-US trade seen likely to weaken further

▶ American consumers, companies to taste bitter outcome of dispute

- By Song Lin

China’s overall foreign trade expanded steadily in the first seven months of the year, with a 4.2 percent year-on-year increase, while trade with the US declined, customs data showed Thursday.

Experts noted that the US, which was formerly the No.2 trading partner of China, might fall into fourth spot soon if trade tensions worsen.

The Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations has leapfrogge­d the US to become the second-largest trading partner of China. Bilateral trade from January to July reached 2.35 trillion yuan ($334 billion), up 11.3 percent year-on-year, according to China’s General Administra­tion of Customs.

China-US trade, by contrast, dropped 8.1 percent year-onyear to 2.1 trillion yuan.

Detailed informatio­n from the customs agency showed that US exports to China dived 24 percent in the period to 473.9 billion yuan, less than China’s fourth-largest trading partner – Japan – which had exports to China worth 653.5 billion yuan.

Dong Shaopeng, a senior research fellow with Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies of Renmin University of China, said that with the US pursuing protection­ist trade policies and threatenin­g new tariff hikes on Chinese products, trade between the world’s two largest economies will further weaken and the negative effects will eventually spill over to the global economy.

“There’s mutual demand for products in China and the US. But China has more flexibilit­y since its domestic market keeps growing and overseas markets including countries and regions under the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) framework keep growing,” Dong said.

China’s trade with BRI-related economies increased by 10.2 percent to 5.03 trillion yuan in the first seven months.

“Thanks to years of constructi­on of BRI projects including infrastruc­ture and telecommun­ications, the potential of the huge market has emerged and the trade between China and BRI markets will keep growing at a faster pace,” Zhang Jianping, director general with the Center for Regional Economic Cooperatio­n under the Ministry of Commerce, told the Global Times on Thursday.

Daily necessitie­s that the US imports from China have fewer substitute­s and new tariffs will mostly show up in the costs to US consumers and related companies, especially when multiple shopping peak seasons are coming in the second half of the year, such as Thanksgivi­ng and Christmas, Dong noted.

China’s soybean imports decreased 11.2 percent year-onyear in the first seven months to 46.9 million tons, according to the customs data.

Dong said China has adjusted its soybean consumptio­n, such as lowering the soybean proportion in swine feed, and started to expand its supply chain, including imports from Russia.

Chinese firms stopped purchasing US agricultur­al products after the Trump administra­tion threatened to impose 10 percent tariffs on $300 billion worth of Chinese imports.

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