China IT
Exports Rise in July
[ABS News Service/10.08.2024]
China’s
exports rose 7% in July from a year earlier, below economists’ forecasts for growth
closer to 10% as trade tensions and weakening growth in the United States and
other major markets weighed on demand, the Associated Press news service
reported.
Chinese
leaders have ramped up investment in manufacturing to rev up an economy that
stalled during the pandemic and is still growing more slowly than hoped. But
moves to tame inflation by raising interest rates have bit into consumer demand
in affluent Western countries.
Imports
climbed 7.2% to $215.9 billion, picking up momentum on stronger trade with
other Asian countries that now supply many industrial components, materials and
consumer products to China. Exports to the United States rose 2.4% year-on-year
while shipments to Southeast Asian countries, now Beijing's biggest trading
partner overall, jumped 11%.
Exports totaled $300.6 billion in July, expanding at the slowest
pace in three months and leaving a trade surplus for July of $84.7 billion.
That was down from a record $99.1 billion the month before, but the surplus
rose nearly 8% in January-July from the same period a year earlier.
During the
first seven months of the year, China's exports climbed 4% from a year earlier,
while imports were up a lackluster 2.8% as growth in
consumer demand remained muted.
Exports of IT
products and computers rose sharply, as did imports of the components needed to
make them.
China’s
exports are forecast to weaken in coming months as sharp hikes in U.S. and
European tariffs on electric vehicles take effect. As reports said freighters
have been seen carrying big shipments of vehicles to European ports to try to
beat those duties, exports of vehicles rose 18% in the first seven months of
the year from the same period in 2023.
The rebound
in imports in July is likely to take hold as the government moves to support consumer
demand and revive China's ailing property sector, according to Zichun Huang, China economist at Capital Economics.