Janbaz
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China tries to reduce trade surplus, cautions against quick results
BEIJING: China is taking active measures to reduce its ballooning trade surplus, but its trade minister cautioned on Monday that the increasingly politicised problem will not be resolved quickly.
“It is true that our trade surplus last year reached a historic high,” Bo Xilai told journalists. “In the past few years we have taken a series of trade measures that are aimed at boosting imports and slowing the growth in exports.”
Shortly after Bo spoke, the customs authorities published trade figures showing a near-record 23.8-billion-dollar trade surplus in February. China’s trade surplus last year soared 74 per cent to hit a record $177.5 billion, according to previously published government data. Bo maintained the Chinese government was not seeking a large trade surplus and was actually hoping for a balance in its international payments.
“The surplus was not formed only because of trade issues, it has developed due to the industrial structure and the overall situation with the global economy,” he said. “So we should not expect to see the resolution of the trade surplus problem in the short term, or only because of some trade measures.”
He further said China’s booming export-driven economy was fueled by foreign-invested companies and the processing trade, where overseas companies were reaping the profits. “China has a big trade surplus, but the profits are being made by (these) companies,” he said.
Bo also voiced opposition to proposed legislation in the United States that would impose 27.5 per cent tariffs on Chinese imports if Beijing did not take greater measures to free up the exchange rate of its currency.
“If this proposal moves forward, it would destroy the currently healthy development of Sino-US trade,” Bo said. “China is firmly opposed to this, we believe that this does not conform with WTO rules and if it is implemented would not only be trade protectionism but trade hegemony.” US lawmakers have accused China of maintaining the yuan at artificially low levels in an effort to boost exports.
The News.
http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=46595
BEIJING: China is taking active measures to reduce its ballooning trade surplus, but its trade minister cautioned on Monday that the increasingly politicised problem will not be resolved quickly.
“It is true that our trade surplus last year reached a historic high,” Bo Xilai told journalists. “In the past few years we have taken a series of trade measures that are aimed at boosting imports and slowing the growth in exports.”
Shortly after Bo spoke, the customs authorities published trade figures showing a near-record 23.8-billion-dollar trade surplus in February. China’s trade surplus last year soared 74 per cent to hit a record $177.5 billion, according to previously published government data. Bo maintained the Chinese government was not seeking a large trade surplus and was actually hoping for a balance in its international payments.
“The surplus was not formed only because of trade issues, it has developed due to the industrial structure and the overall situation with the global economy,” he said. “So we should not expect to see the resolution of the trade surplus problem in the short term, or only because of some trade measures.”
He further said China’s booming export-driven economy was fueled by foreign-invested companies and the processing trade, where overseas companies were reaping the profits. “China has a big trade surplus, but the profits are being made by (these) companies,” he said.
Bo also voiced opposition to proposed legislation in the United States that would impose 27.5 per cent tariffs on Chinese imports if Beijing did not take greater measures to free up the exchange rate of its currency.
“If this proposal moves forward, it would destroy the currently healthy development of Sino-US trade,” Bo said. “China is firmly opposed to this, we believe that this does not conform with WTO rules and if it is implemented would not only be trade protectionism but trade hegemony.” US lawmakers have accused China of maintaining the yuan at artificially low levels in an effort to boost exports.
The News.
http://thenews.jang.com.pk/daily_detail.asp?id=46595