The Philippine Star

China trade bounces back in June

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BEIJING (AFP) – Chinese trade enjoyed surprise growth in June as the world slowly emerges from economystr­angling lockdowns, though officials warned of headwinds for recovery owing to the spread of the pandemic.

The figures come days before the release of data expected to show the world’s number two economy returned to growth in the second quarter following a contractio­n in the first three months of the year.

The 2.7-percent growth in imports was the first since December and much better than the nine-percent contractio­n forecast in a Bloomberg News poll, while exports also beat expectatio­ns by rising 0.5 percent.

In May, imports had collapsed 16.7 percent and exports retreated 3.3 percent.

Customs spokesman Li Kuiwen told reporters Tuesday that imports and exports showed “signs of recovery and stability” in the second quarter and that China was “forging ahead” with efforts to ensure stability in areas such as employment, foreign trade, and investment.

But he cautioned the external environmen­t is “more grim and complicate­d” now, with COVID-19 plunging the global economy into a deep recession and internatio­nal trade and investment experienci­ng sharp contractio­ns.

In the first half, exports dropped 6.2 percent year-on-year while imports fell 7.1 percent, official data showed, reflecting the hit from the pandemic, which first surfaced in central China.

ING China economist Iris Pang told AFP agricultur­al purchases boosted imports and that the push could continue if floods ravaging much of central China persist, threatenin­g food supplies.

“We also see a broad-based recovery in exports,” she said.

China’s economy is expected to have grown in April-June, having shrunk 6.8 percent in the preceding three months as the virus battered the planet.

That was the first quarterly contractio­n since China began logging such data in the early 1990s.

Beijing’s trade surplus with the United States – a major cause of anger in the White House – narrowed slightly to $29.4 billion in June, down 1.7 percent year-on-year.

Tensions have been rising as the superpower­s trade barbs on multiple fronts, including the pandemic and a new security law in Hong Kong.

But Li said the US and China will continue to implement a phase-one trade deal signed in January that marked a truce in their long-running trade war.

Analysts warn, however, that the trade recovery could lose momentum due to weak external demand from renewed lockdowns in key trading partners.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Chinese flags are seen in front of constructi­on vehicles during the China Import and Export Fair, also known as Canton Fair, in the southern city of Guangzhou, China.
REUTERS Chinese flags are seen in front of constructi­on vehicles during the China Import and Export Fair, also known as Canton Fair, in the southern city of Guangzhou, China.

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