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China exports see surprise 3.5% jump in April, imports fall

China’s exports saw a shock 3.5 percent rise in April despite the global impact of the coronavirus pandemic, official figures showed Thursday, but analysts warned of weakness ahead as key markets suffer downturns.

The brewing threat of a renewed trade war with the United States could also pose a problem, observers said.

Imports fell 14.2 percent on-year, a steeper drop than last month, according to the Customs Administration.

A forecast of analysts by Bloomberg had predicted an 11 percent dive in exports and a 10 percent plunge in imports.

Beijing says it has been successful in largely curbing the spread of the virus in the country, and many businesses and factories are now back at work after months of closure to contain the outbreak.

Louis Kuijs of Oxford Economics noted that “April shipments may have been boosted by exporters making up for shortfalls in the first quarter due to supply constraints then”.

In the January-February period, the height of the coronavirus outbreak in China, exports had plummeted 17.2 percent.

ING chief economist for Greater China Iris Pang told AFP that another potential boost was China’s exports of medical supplies as the rest of the world grappled with the pandemic.

The manufacturing of parts for 5G infrastructure in Asian supply chains would have continued as well, and given that these are tied to government-planned projects, they are less affected by market demand, Pang said.

But in spite of the bounceback this time — the first return to positive territory for exports this year — analysts do not expect the trend to last as China’s key trading partners fall into recession.

Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics said Chinese shipments are unlikely immune from the sharp slowdown in global activity for long, pointing to a recent plunge in South Korean exports and noting they are a “timely proxy for global demand”.

Analysts have warned of an enormous impact on world trade from the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed more than 260,500 people worldwide.

Oxford Economics expects global trade in goods and services could be cut by up to 15 percent in 2020, much larger than the 10 percent decline in 2009 during the global financial crisis.

Evans-Pritchard added that “the threat of additional US tariffs on Chinese goods shouldn’t be ignored”.

Recovery has been slow in the world’s second-largest economy, which was already tackling weak overseas demand and a bruising trade war with the US before the outbreak ground much of the country to a halt.

“The Chinese government is still maintaining some social distancing measures, consumer confidence is clouded by elevated uncertainty, and plummeting exports dent household income and slash millions of jobs,” Nomura analysts said in a recent report.

The daily average of domestic trips over the Labour Day holiday was half of last year’s total, while daily tourism revenues fell 68 percent.

(BSS)

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