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China Trade Surplus Rises to $50 Billion [Archive] - DVD Talk Forum
 
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View Full Version : China Trade Surplus Rises to $50 Billion


VinVega
08-11-05, 12:31 PM
Yahoo linky (http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050811/ap_on_bi_ge/china_economy)
By ELAINE KURTENBACH, AP Business Writer

SHANGHAI, China - China's cumulative trade surplus for the year rose to $50 billion in July, far exceeding the $32 billion surplus for all of 2004, as tighter credit and spending policies bit into the growth in imports, the government reported Thursday.

Importing from China - as Easy as ABC
We source and import almost anything made in China. Metal, plastic,...
www.americanbestcrafts.com Economists say it is too early for the impact of China's July 21 revaluation of the yuan — raising its value by about 2 percent against the dollar — to show up in trade figures. But the persisting strong trade surplus could fuel calls from the U.S. and other trading partners for further currency adjustments.

China's trade surplus in July totaled $10.4 billion. Exports in July rose 28.7 percent from a year earlier to $65.58 billion, while imports climbed 12.7 percent to $55.18 billion, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Exports surged 32 percent in the first seven months of the year, compared with the same period a year earlier, to $407.94 billion (329 billion euros), Xinhua said. Imports rose by a much more modest 13.8 percent to $357.96 billion (288.7 billion euros) — implying an aggregate trade surplus of $50 billion.

China's exports rose 35.4 percent last year, helping the country's trade surplus to reach a six-year high of $32 billion. The persistent strength in exports, coupled with weaker growth in imports, has fueled a backlash from critics who accused Beijing of keeping the yuan's value artificially weak.

Surging exports of Chinese-made apparel following the abolition of worldwide quotas on textile products at the beginning of the year have further sharpened trade tensions, especially with the United States and Europe.

The ultimate impact of China's revaluation of the yuan from its longtime peg of 8.28 yuan per U.S. dollar to about 8.11 yuan per dollar remains to be seen. The yuan has since gained value against the dollar, and was trading at about 8.1010 at midday Thursday.

A stronger yuan should make China's exports more expensive while making overseas products relatively cheaper, encouraging more imports. But government curbs on spending and credit have hurt purchases of high-ticket items such as luxury cars, sapping growth in imports.

Meanwhile Thursday, the government reported that China's consumer price index, its main measure of inflation, rose a faster-than-expected 1.8 percent over a year earlier in July.

The July figure compares with a 1.6 percent year-on year increase in June, but is well below the 5.3 percent peak reached a year earlier.

Chinese officials warn that inflation remains a threat to China's robust economic growth, which has topped 9 percent for two years running.

However, in the first seven months of the year, the consumer price index has risen at an annual rate of 2.2 percent, well within the inflation target of within 3 percent to 3.5 percent for this year.
China - making the products you need, cheaply. :banana:

E70f
08-11-05, 12:35 PM
America - buying the products you don't need, cheaply from Communists, funding the Communist military via WalMart.

X
08-11-05, 01:00 PM
I'm doing my part to lessen it. You wouldn't believe how many products I am ready to buy but reject when I see "Made in China" on them.

I recently made a special trip to a store to buy some new poker chips. They looked like what I wanted, I was ready to get them, but then I saw the dreaded words and left without them. I'll live.

I don't understand why that's so difficult for other people.

E70f
08-11-05, 01:11 PM
Nor do I :( I hope you told the store why you weren't buying them, and maybe emailed the (presumably 'American') manufacturers too.

We're slowing fucking ourselves for the sake of cheaper crap. This is really going to hurt us in the future. It's so sad.

X
08-11-05, 01:14 PM
Nor do I :( I hope you told the store why you weren't buying them, and maybe emailed the (presumably 'American') manufacturers too.I didn't and should start doing that.

It's sad that people don't look at the entire cost of buying from China. Like welfare costs, unemployment, high oil prices, defense spending, etc.

Myster X
08-11-05, 02:09 PM
People might have to depend on China for a while since the gas/energy prices are hitting the pockets. Spend more on gas, spend less and buy some lower end products.

X
08-11-05, 02:13 PM
And why are the gas/energy prices hitting the pockets? Due to Chinese demand to make those products. We have become enslaved by our own greed. Greed of crap.

sracer
08-11-05, 04:10 PM
And why are the gas/energy prices hitting the pockets? Due to Chinese demand to make those products. We have become enslaved by our own greed. Greed of crap.
Not quite.
Cheap crap from Mexico, South America = GOOD.
Cheap crap from China = BAD.
It's not greed of crap that is bad... it is where that crap is coming from that is. At least that's what cardboard conservatives tell me. :shrug:

X
08-11-05, 04:14 PM
Cheap crap from anywhere outside our country affects us in employment and balance of trade.

While I prefer buying American, cheap crap from Mexico, Central America, and South America helps promote their economies and stability and will eventually lessen or end the illegal immigration problem we have with them.

China is using our money to arm themselves against us. Only Venezuela is doing that in our hemisphere and that's a recent phenomenon.

And what's a "cardboard conservative"?

hahn
08-12-05, 12:12 AM
I'm doing my part to lessen it. You wouldn't believe how many products I am ready to buy but reject when I see "Made in China" on them.

I recently made a special trip to a store to buy some new poker chips. They looked like what I wanted, I was ready to get them, but then I saw the dreaded words and left without them. I'll live.

I don't understand why that's so difficult for other people.

Good luck buying ANYTHING ever again.