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发表于 2009-10-15 09:49:28
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Separately, China International Capital Corp., projected September exports would fall by 16 percent from last year's figure.
Exports are recovering, however, Shen Jianguang, an economist at CICC, told Caijing on Oct. 13, citing information from the Shanghai Shipping Exchange, which said the cost of outbound container shipping soared in September.
CICC said in an Oct. 12 report that China's exports for 2010 are expected to grow 10 percent year-on-year.
In the first nine months, exports fell 21.3 percent year-on-year to US$846.6 billion, while imports dropped 20.4 percent to US$711.1 billion.
The European Union was China's biggest trade partner in the first three quarters, with bilateral trade of US$260 billion, down 19.4 percent year-on-year.
The United States ranked second, with bilateral trade at US$211.9 billion, down 15.8 percent year-on-year, and Japan was third, with a trade figure of US$162.2 billion, down 20 percent on last year.
The trade surplus for September was US$12.9 billion, Customs did not provide comparative figures.
CASS' Song told Caijing that about half of China's imports are linked to the processing trade, and the rise in inbound shipments reflects a pick-up in related industries rather than a rise in domestic demand.
"The trade surplus is still big," the State Council's Long said. "It's impossible to see domestic demand growing enough to offset the trade surplus amid the global economic slump."
"There is no chance China will run a trade deficit over the next few years, even though the surplus has been reduced," Long said.
The trade surplus for the first nine months was US$135.5 billion, down 26 percent year-on-year, customs said. |
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