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China’s ‘20 trade surplus with US swelled to $317b

BEIJING”•China’s trade surplus with the United States widened last year, underlining the failure of Donald Trump to narrow the gap during his tenure, while demand soared for electronics and medical equipment during the coronavirus pandemic.

The pick-up came on the back of a jump in exports through most of last year as China’s factories kicked back into gear from the second quarter following a strict lockdown that managed to broadly contain COVID-19 and allow economic activity to return.

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Trump had made addressing the gaping trade gap with China a priority when he took office four years ago, and signed a partial agreement with Beijing to boost the country’s purchases of goods such as soybeans.

But Chinese customs data showed the surplus with the US climbed 7.1 percent to $316.9 billion in 2020.

The figure is a 14.9-percent jump from 2017’s surplus of $275.8 billion”•which was already a sensitive political issue due to Trump’s claims that China held unfair practices and killed US jobs.

While the world’s second-largest economy suffered a record contraction in the first quarter of last year as the coronavirus essentially brought all activity to a halt, it soon recovered as lockdowns around the country were eased and people went back to work.

Total exports rose 3.6 percent, though imports shrank 1.1 percent.

In December, however, both exports and imports rose more than expected, at 18.1 percent and 6.5 percent respectively.

“With the pandemic under control in China, factories and export-oriented companies have resumed normal operations earlier than most other countries, allowing China to meet global demand better,” said Axi strategist Stephen Innes.

The country posted a trade surplus for last month of $78 billion, which analysts said was “at or near record   levels.”

Customs spokesman Li Kuiwen told reporters Thursday that “facing unprecedented difficulties and challenges, our country’s imports and exports delivered a brilliant report card,” adding that the outcome was “significantly better than expected.”

Li said outbound shipments of electronics rose, with increases seen in notebook computers and household appliances, as well as medical instruments and equipment.

Iris Pang, ING chief economist for Greater China, told AFP that China’s exports likely did well as “other exporters for most of the year had been in difficult positions because of COVID-19,” shifting more orders to China.

On the US-China surplus, she said coronavirus restrictions in the US would also have hit export capacity.

“The other thing is, during COVID-19, some commodity prices went down and affected the value of what China imported,” she said, adding that Beijing will likely continue to fulfill its terms of the trade deal with the US, barring added demands from Washington.

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