The Borneo Post

China Sept imports blow past expectatio­ns as economy remains in high gear

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BEIJING: China’s import and export growth accelerate­d in September, suggesting the world’s second-biggest economy is still expanding at a healthy pace despite widespread forecasts of an eventual slowdown.

The data also suggested further improvemen­t in the global economy, with business activity and demand having picked up markedly this year in Europe and the United States.

The upbeat readings will be welcome new for Beijing ahead of a twice-a-decade Communist Party Congress next week, at which President Xi Jinping is expected to tighten his grip on power and set out the government’s top political and economic priorities for the next five years.

Imports grew 18.7 per cent in September from a year earlier, beating analysts’ forecasts for a 13.5 per cent expansion and accelerati­ng from 13.3 per cent in August, customs data showed on Friday.

The gain was stronger than the most optimistic forecast in a Reuters analysts poll.

Exports rose 8.1 per cent, below forecasts of 8.8 per cent but the most in three months and handily beating August’s 5.5 per cent.

“Growth momentum is still quite strong and better than our previous expectatio­ns,” ANZ senior China economist Betty Wang said.

Once again, China’s imports were led by industrial resources as a year-long constructi­on boom shows no signs of flagging and factories kept humming, boosting demand for materials from steel to copper.

Higher commodity prices greatly magnified the strength of the bounce, but volumes surged, too, pointing to still-solid underlying demand.

Iron ore imports rose to a record 103 million tonnes, from 88.7 million tonnes in August, according to Reuters calculatio­ns. Copper imports were the highest since March.

That left the country with a trade surplus of US$28.47 billion, less than the near US$40 billion expected and down from around US$42 billion in August.

China’s foreign trade will likely grow at a double-digit pace this year if current conditions continue, the General Administra­tion of Customs said.

In addition to pointing to buoyant demand, some of the surge in September imports may have been due to companies “front loading” supplies ahead of a week-long national holiday in early October, analysts said.

Capital Economics’ China economist Julian Evans-Pritchard said the timing of the mid-Autumn festival this year also meant there were more working days last month than in September 2016, suggesting October figures should show a partial reversal.

“Nonetheles­s, today’s figures suggest that not only has strong foreign demand continued to prop up manufactur­ing activity in China but domestic demand remains resilient, too,” EvansPritc­hard said.

China’s politicall­y sensitive trade surplus with the United States rose to a record for a single month, according to Reuters calculatio­ns using official data going back to 2008.

The surplus grew to US$28.08 billion from US$26.23 billion in August. — Reuters

 ??  ?? An employee works at an assembly line of bulldozers at a factory in Zhangjiako­u, Hebei province. China’s import and export growth accelerate­d in September, suggesting the world’s second-biggest economy is still expanding at a healthy pace despite...
An employee works at an assembly line of bulldozers at a factory in Zhangjiako­u, Hebei province. China’s import and export growth accelerate­d in September, suggesting the world’s second-biggest economy is still expanding at a healthy pace despite...

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