China's trade surplus for February skyrocketed tenfold
year-on-year, reaching US$23.76 billion, the General Administration
of Customs announced yesterday.
While exports topped the January total by 51.7 percent, imports
rose at a sluggish 13.1 percent, less than half the previous
month's growth rate.
February's totals hit US$82.1 billion for exports and US$58.34
billion for imports. This amounted to a total trade volume of
US$140.44 billion, up 32.9 percent year-on-year, according to the
latest figures.
In terms of trade surplus, February stood close to 50 percent
higher than January, when the surplus had leveled out at US$15.88
billion.
The rise of the yuan has seen exporters' revenues increase,
while the matching rise for importers was significantly slower, due
to cheaper imported primary products, said Mei Xinyu, research
fellow at the Ministry of Commerce's International Trade and
Economic Cooperation Research Institute.
The RMB's consistent rise against the US dollar peaked at a new
record high last Thursday with the central parity rate reaching
7.7386 yuan to the dollar. Furthermore, so far in 2007, the yuan
has gained 613 basis points.
In 2006, China's trade surplus maintained its meteoric rise,
leaping 74 percent year-on-year to reach US$177.47 billion.
International trade rose with top trading partner, the European
Union, seeing trade with China reach US$51.08 billion for the first
two months of 2007, indicating a 42.7 percent jump from last year,
the customs data show.
The United States ranked second with a trade volume of US$43.86
billion, trailed by Japan and the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations.
(Xinhua News Agency March 13, 2007)