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China signs rebalancing with Q1 trade deficit

REUTERS

BEIJING CHINA recorded a rare trade deficit in the first quarter of the year on the back of domestic economic strength and rising global commodity prices, the customs administration said on Sunday.

From January to March, China imported $1.02 billion more than it exported, marking its first quarterly trade deficit since 2004, the General Administration of Customs said.

The trade numbers showed that China’s economy was evolving in a more sustainable direction by becoming less reliant on exports, said Isaac Meng, economist with BNP Paribas in Beijing.

That is an essential ingredient in the rebalancing that analysts say is needed to put the global economy on more stable footing.

“Even though the exchange rate is only slowly appreciating, strong inflation, especially labour costs, is making the rebalancing happen,” Meng said.

Zheng Yuesheng, statistics chief with the customs administration, told state television that the first-quarter deficit was likely to be “temporary”, but added that the full-year trade surplus would be smaller in 2011 than 2010.

In March alone, China reported a tiny trade surplus of $140 million, following a $7.3 billion deficit in February.

China’s exports were up 35.8 percent in March from a year earlier, while imports rose 27.3 percent from a year earlier.

Economists had expected exports to rise 21.0 percent year on year and imports to increase 19.5 percent year on year, producing a trade deficit of $4.2 billion.

The first-quarter trade deficit is partly a seasonal issue because Chinese exports tend to be slow early in the year.

But it also speaks to the progress that China is making towards having a more balanced trade relationship with the rest of the world.

Less about any specific policy, this is a reflection of basic economic reality.

China already is the world’s biggest exporter and so has little scope to increase its exports further, while its demand for imports is increasing in leaps and bounds alongside its ultra-fast growth.

China has faced calls from the United States, the European Union and others to let its yuan currency appreciate more quickly as a way to cut its yawning trade surplus.

Beijing has opted for gradual nominal appreciation — the yuan has gained just 4.5 percent against the dollar since being depegged last June — but rising costs are translating into faster real appreciation and denting demand for Chinese exports.

On the import side, officials have repeatedly vowed to buy more foreign products to reduce the country’s huge trade surplus.

For now, though, soaring global commodity costs were the more immediate factor driving up China’s import bill.


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