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China Exports Surge Stems From Covid Disruptions: Analysts

Officials said the increase in March showed rising demand for electric vehicles, but experts said suppliers were just catching up on unfulfilled orders after Covid disruptions last year


Signs are emerging that China's trade and economic slump may be easing.
China's exports fell 6.2% from a year ago, while imports declined by the same amount, customs data showed on Friday (AFP file pic).

 

China’s exports jumped unexpectedly by nearly 15% in March, but analysts warned that the figures are a little misleading.

Officials suggested the increase showed rising demand for electric vehicles, but experts said suppliers were merely catching up with unfulfilled orders after last year’s Covid-19 disruptions.

Exports in March shot up 14.8% from a year ago, snapping five straight months of declines, stunning economists who predicted a 7% fall in a Reuters poll.

But analysts say the jump was more likely related to exporters rushing to fulfill a backlog of orders that were disrupted by the pandemic in recent months, and warned that global demand outlook remained subdued.

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Global outlook ‘still severe’

“The wave of Covid-19 outbreaks in December and January likely depleted factories’ inventories. Now that factories are running at full capacity, they caught up the cumulated orders from the past,” said Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management.”

“The strong export growth is unlikely to sustain given the weak global macro outlook,” he added.

Meanwhile, imports fell less than expected, with economists pointing to an acceleration in the purchase of agricultural products, especially soybeans, as providing some support.

Imports dropped just 1.4%, smaller than the 5% decline forecast and a 10.2% contraction in the previous two months.

Lv Daliang, spokesperson of the General Administration of Customs, attributed the upside surprise to strength in demand for electric vehicles, solar products and lithium batteries.

However, he warned conditions could worsen going forward.

“The external environment is still severe and complicated at present,” Lv told reporters in Beijing on Thursday. “Sluggish external demand and geopolitical factors will bring greater challenges to China’s trade development,” he added.

 

‘Downturn has some way to run’

China’s strong performance contrasts with that of other Asian exporters, such as South Korea and Vietnam, which have both seen exports decline in the first few months of 2023, contributing to doubts that it can be sustained.

“We aren’t convinced that this rebound will be sustained given the still gloomy outlook for foreign demand,” Capital Economics analysts said in a note.

“We expect most developed economies to slip into recession this year and think that the downturn in Chinese exports still has some way to run before it reaches a bottom later this year.”

China’s newly appointed premier Li Qiang told a cabinet meeting last week that officials should “try every method” to grow trade with developed economies and push companies to further explore emerging market economies, such as those of Southeast Asia.

Beijing has set a growth target of around 5% for gross domestic product (GDP) this year, after severe pandemic controls last year knocked the economy to one of its slowest rates in decades. GDP rose only 3% last year.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.

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