Business

China’s exports surge in May as easing COVID curbs rev up trade, help boost supplies

China’s exports grew at a double-digit pace in May, shattering expectations in an encouraging sign for the world’s second biggest economy, as factories restarted and logistics snags eased after authorities relaxed some COVID curbs in Shanghai.
Imports also expanded for the first time in three months, providing welcome relief to Chinese policy makers as they try to chart an economic path out of the supply-side shock that has rocked global trade and financial markets in recent months.

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Still, China’s trade outlook remains hostage to global risks, including from high raw material costs, uncertainties from the Ukraine war and slowing overseas demand. Recovering production in other economies and a shift of global spending from goods to services could also affect demand for Chinese goods.
Outbound shipments in May jumped 16.9 percent from a year earlier, the fastest growth since January this year, and more than double analysts’ expectations for a 8.0 percent rise. Exports were up 3.9 percent in April.
Imports, on the other hand, rose 4.1 percent in May from a year earlier, the first gain in three months and compared with flat growth in April. They were expected to rise 2.0 percent.
“In May, logistics and supply chains were well repaired, so from the view of supply, unfavorable factors which weighed down export growth in April have greatly eased, leading to a jump in the year-on-year growth last month,” said Zheng Houcheng, director of the Yingda Securities Research Institute.
Zheng added that imports, although beating forecasts, still reflected sluggish domestic demand.
Economic activity cooled sharply in April as the country grappled with the worst COVID-19 outbreak since 2020. Stringent lockdown measures, sometimes excessively enforced by local officials, had clogged highways and ports, stranded workers and shut factories.
To stabilize the situation in a politically sensitive year, the State Council has called on local officials to revive supply chains, restore economic growth and rein in unemployment. Major automakers have been able to ramp up production in May and cargo handling capacity at ports and airports are returning closer to pre-lockdown level.
Electric car maker Tesla reopened its factory in Shanghai on April 19 after a 22-day stoppage, and returned to pre-lockdown production levels in late May.
The Shanghai port, which was running at severely reduced capacity in April, has also been handling more cargos since last month, with official data showing that daily container throughput at the world’s biggest port back to 95.3 percent of the normal level in late May.
Official and private surveys showed China’s factory activity contracted at a slower pace in May as COVID-19 curbs in major manufacturing hubs eased, with a gauge on export orders improving.
China posted a trade surplus of $78.76 billion last month, versus a forecast for a $58 billion surplus in the poll. The country reported a $51.12 billion surplus in April.
China’s cabinet recently announced a package of 33 measures covering fiscal, financial, investment and industrial policies, although analysts say the official GDP target of around 5.5 percent for this year will be hard to achieve without doing away with the zero-COVID strategy.
The central bank in May cut its benchmark reference rate for mortgages by an unexpectedly wide margin, its second reduction this year as Beijing seeks to revive the ailing housing sectorto prop up the economy.
First-quarter gross domestic product (GDP) expanded by 4.8 percent from a year earlier, but analysts expect growth this quarter
would take a heavy hit due to the lockdowns in Shanghai, with some economists warning the risk of recession is rising.

Read more: China committed to building an open global economy, says top diplomat Wang Yi

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