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New demand likely to boost exports

Emerging market sales grow strongly this year

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“Chinese products are highly competitiv­e in global markets thanks to their high quality and relatively low prices, and can well meet demand from economies seeking sustained and fast growth.”

Bai Ming

SHANGHAI: China’s exports are expected to become more resilient, as demand from emerging markets such as Asean and India expands rapidly, experts say after reviewing official data that Customs released.

Data showed exports to emerging markets in the first seven months of the year grew strongly though the global economy is cooling.

“The fast growth in exports to emerging markets reflects the improving economic and trade ties between China and those economies, and the momentum is expected to continue,” said Bai Ming, deputy director of the internatio­nal market research department at the Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n (Caitec) in Beijing.

“Thanks to that, China’s exports are expected to remain resilient, despite the economic recession facing the developed economies and the protection­ist approach to trade adopted by the United States and some European countries.”

According to the General Administra­tion of Customs, China’s exports to Asean, its largest trading partner, surged 19% from a year ago to 2.05 trillion yuan (RM1.3 trillion) during the first seven months of the year.

The value of exports to countries participat­ing in the Belt and Road Initiative also gained nearly 20% year-on-year, to hit 4.27 trillion yuan (RM2.8 trillion).

Analysts said the fast growth pace was mostly attributab­le to the removal of supply chain snarls in China and ramped-up production in those economies.

This has much improved demand for raw materials and intermedia­te goods from China.

On a broader note, the growth was also catalysed by improvemen­t in bilateral trade,

and investment facilitati­on and liberalisa­tion between China and Asean economies, thanks to their free trade agreements and other trade arrangemen­ts, they said.

According to a new report from Hua Chuang Securities, China’s robust exports were to a large extent driven by the growing demand in developed economies from 2021.

As the developed economies have started to stall, their contributi­on to China’s export growth slumped.

On the other hand, China’s exports to emerging markets such as Asean and India have increased in recent months, relative to the pre-covid-19 levels, the report stated.

From 2016 to 2019, outbound shipments to India, Indonesia and Brazil accounted for 2.5%, 1.3% and 1.7%, respective­ly, of China’s overall exports.

In recent months, the correspond­ing figures rose to 2.7%, 1.5% and 2%, the report stated.

Bai of Caitec said work and business resumption in emerging markets since the Covid outbreaks, and more importantl­y, the huge economic potential in those developing economies, will ensure that they will have increasing demand for Chinese products for a long period.

“Chinese products are highly competitiv­e in global markets thanks to their high quality and relatively low prices, and can well meet demand from economies seeking sustained and fast growth,” he said.

He added that improved connectivi­ty also contribute­d to the nation’s fast growth of exports to emerging markets.

According to Hua Chuang Securities report, China’s exports of chemicals, textile raw materials, textile products and base metal products to Asean have increased significan­tly this year.

Exports of chemicals, plastic and rubber products, base metal products, and mechanical and electrical products to India, as well as exports of chemicals, mechanical and electrical products, and textile raw materials to Brazil, have also ballooned.

Zhao Wei, chief economist at Sinolink Securities, said there was strong complement­arity in the export structures of China and Asean.

Against the background of high labour and energy costs, the division of labour and cooperatio­n between China and Asean across the regional industrial chain may help them to receive more orders in global trade, which can add resilience to their exports.

Gao Lingyun, director of the internatio­nal investment division at the Institute of World Economics and Politics, which is part of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, however, said Chinese enterprise­s need to reduce production costs and rise in the global value chain.

This is to sustain and improve the competitiv­eness of Chinese goods in the global markets. — China Daily/ann

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