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China’s exports and imports sink in September as global demand falters

Exports for September slid 6.2%, marking the fifth straight month of decline.

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China’s exports and imports both fell in September from a year earlier, though they contracted at a slower pace than the month before even as global demand remained muted.

Customs data released on Friday showed exports for September slid 6.2% to 299.13 billion dollars (£244 billion) in the fifth straight month of decline. Imports also slid 6.2%, to 221.43 billion dollars (£180.6 billion).

China posted a trade surplus of 77.71 billion dollars (£63.39 billion), up from 68.36 billion dollars (£55.7 billion) in August.

Lu Daliang, a spokesperson for the General Administration of Customs, said in a press conference in Beijing that the unstable momentum of the global economy’s recovery from the pandemic was the biggest challenge facing China’s exports.

Shanghai scenes
A sales promoter browses his phone while waiting for customers at a tennis merchandise store at Qizhong Forest Sports City Tennis Centre in Shanghai (AP)

However, property sector remains a drag on the economy, with sales slumping and developers struggling to repay massive amounts of debt.

The central bank has eased borrowing rules and and cut mortgage rates for first-time home buyers while providing some tax relief measures for small businesses.

Demand for Chinese exports weakened after the US Federal Reserve and central banks in Europe and Asia began raising interest rates last year to cool inflation that was at multi-decade highs.

Exports to the US tumbled 16.4% from a year earlier while those to the European Union declined nearly 11%.

Zichun Huang, a China economist with Capital Economics, said: “Measures of foreign orders point to a more substantial decline in foreign demand than what has been reflected in the customs data so far.

China Trade
China’s exports and imports both fell in September from a year earlier, though they contracted at a slower pace even as global demand remained muted (AP)

However, he said imports are likely to pick up in the coming months as increased spending on construction rises, driving higher demand for building materials and other commodities.

China’s imports from Russia, mostly oil and gas, increased 12.7% in September from a year earlier to 11.53 billion dollars (£9.4 billion).

Chinese purchases of Russian energy have swelled, helping to offset revenue lost to Western sanctions imposed to punish the Kremlin for its invasion of Ukraine.

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