Sun.Star Cebu

China imports from US fall 19% in July amid trade tensions

-

CHINESE imports of American goods plunged in July 2019 as a tariff war with Washington intensifie­d.

Imports of US goods fell 19 percent from a year earlier to US$10.9 billion, customs data showed Thursday, Aug. 8, 2019, though that was an improvemen­t over June’s 31.4 percent fall. Exports to the United States declined 6.5 percent to $38.8 billion.

Beijing has retaliated for US tariff hikes in a dispute over trade and technology by imposing its own punitive duties and suspending purchases of American soybeans and other goods.

The latest data follow President Donald Trump’s threat last week to extend punitive duties to an additional $300 billion of Chinese imports.

China’s total exports rose 3.3 percent over a year earlier to $221.5 billion, rebounding from June’s 1.3 percent contractio­n amid weakening global consumer demand. Imports shrank 5.6 percent to $176.4 billion, an improvemen­t over the previous month’s 7.3 percent decline.

“Shipments in and out of China held up better than expected last month, but a sustained turnaround still looks unlikely in the near-term,” said Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics in a report.

China’s central bank rattled global financial markets this week by allowing its yuan to weaken to an 11-year low against the US dollar. That would make Chinese goods less expensive abroad but the currency’s five percent decline this year against the dollar is too small to completely offset US tariffs of 25 percent.

China’s global trade surplus widened by 60 percent over a year ago to $45.1 billion.

The surplus with the United States was little changed but stood at $28 billion, a level that might fuel American pressure for Chinese concession­s in trade talks.

Meeting next month

Washington and Beijing are locked in an increasing­ly costly tariff war over US complaints China steals or pressures companies to hand over technology.

The United States and other Chinese trading partners complain Beijing’s plans for government-led developmen­t of global competitor­s in robotics and other fields violates its market-opening commitment­s.

Trade has weakened since Trump started hiking tariffs on Chinese goods last June. Beijing retaliated with its own penalties and ordered importers to find non-US suppliers.

Trump and China President Xi Jinping agreed in June to resume negotiatio­ns but talks last week in Shanghai ended with no sign of agreement. Envoys are due to meet again next month.

Economists warn the truce is fragile because the two sides still are separated by the disagreeme­nts that caused talks to break down in May.

Trade weakness has added to pressure on Xi’s government to shore up economic growth and avoid politicall­y dangerous job losses.

Beijing agreed in 2018 to narrow its trade surplus with the United States by buying more American natural gas and other exports but scrapped that plan after one of Trump’s tariff hikes.

The Chinese government said in June that any purchases must be at a reasonable level, suggested Beijing was becoming more cautious about making big commitment­s before it sees what Washington offers in exchange.

Chinese leaders express confidence their economy can survive the tariff fight.

Importers of American soybeans and other goods are trying to switch to Brazilian, Russian and other sources, but supplies are limited and costs are higher.

Farmers who use soybeans as animal feed have been told to switch to other grains.

While American exporters have been hit hardest, Chinese industries including electronic­s that Beijing sees as its economic future have suffered double-digit declines in sales to the United States, their biggest market.

Economists say even if a settlement with the US is reached, China’s exports this year will be lackluster due to weak global demand, putting pressure on manufactur­ers that support millions of jobs.

 ?? AP FOTO ?? TRADE IMPACT. A bank employee counts US dollar banknotes next to a stack of 100 Chinese yuan notes at a bank outlet in Hai’an in eastern China’s Jiangsu province. Chinese imports of American goods plunged in July 2019 as a tariff war with Washington intensifie­d.
AP FOTO TRADE IMPACT. A bank employee counts US dollar banknotes next to a stack of 100 Chinese yuan notes at a bank outlet in Hai’an in eastern China’s Jiangsu province. Chinese imports of American goods plunged in July 2019 as a tariff war with Washington intensifie­d.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines