Bangkok Post

China’s imports, exports fall

Analysts sceptical of partial trade deal

- POORNIMA WEERASEKAR­A

BEIJNG: China’s imports and exports fell more than expected in September, official data showed yesterday, as US tariffs and cooling demand at home and abroad hit trade in the world’s second-largest economy.

Globally, China’s exports dropped 3.2% in September from the same period last year, while imports dived 8.5%, according to data from the customs administra­tion.

The figures were worse than a Bloomberg forecast, which estimated exports to drop 2.8% and imports fall 6.0%.

The United States is now China’s third biggest trade partner — after the European Union and the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) — with imports from the US down 26.4% on-year in September.

China promised to increase US agricultur­al purchases in a partial US-China deal announced on Friday, which also includes protection­s for intellectu­al property and opening up financial markets.

Engulfed in an impeachmen­t inquiry, US President Donald

Trump heralded the deal as a major breakthrou­gh.

“But it may only offer a temporary tariff reprieve because it lacks specifics and leaves the thorny issues such as unfair state subsidies to Chinese firms for later,’’ analysts told AFP.

So far, the two sides have imposed

punitive tariffs covering more than $360 billion worth of goods in twoway trade.

China’s trade surplus with the US narrowed 3.9% to $25.8 billion in September from $26.9 billion in August.

“We believe that as Sino-US trade negotiatio­ns have made progress ... and

we expect further healthy developmen­t in bilateral trade,” said Li Kuiwen, a spokesman for Chinese customs.

China’s total trade surplus in September was $39.65 billion.

A major escalation in the trade war last month was “partly to blame” for the weak figures, said Julian Evans-Pritchard, of Capital Economics.

Washington imposed 15% tariffs on more than $125 billion in Chinese imports on September 1, and Beijing retaliated with its own fresh levies.

“As a result, the contractio­n in exports to the US deepened further, while shipments to the rest of the world held steady,” Evans-Pritchard wrote in a research note.

“With the mini US-China trade deal unlikely to alleviate the main headwinds facing exporters, it will take longer before growth in outbound shipments bottoms out.

“Chinese imports, which declined for the fifth consecutiv­e month amid cooling domestic demand, may also not see a strong recovery, he said.

Pork imports, however, surged 43.6% on-year in September after an outbreak of African swine fever decimated pig supplies in the country.

On Friday, Trump played up the “substantia­l phase one” deal as a result of his hard-line stance with China.

But it will take weeks to finalise and the details are not clear — nor will it roll back tariffs already in place on hundreds of billions of dollars in twoway trade.

“The deal is still tentative and tensions remain high,” said Tommy Wu of Oxford Economics.

China’s state media also struck a cautionary tone and did not mention any “deal”.

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