BEIJING (AP) — China's
import growth showed an unexpectedly sharp drop in December in a new sign the
world's second-largest economy is slowing.
December growth in imports fell
to 11.8 percent, barely above half the previous month's 22.1 percent gain,
customs data showed Tuesday. Exports rose 13.4 percent, down slightly from
November's growth rate. The country's politically sensitive global trade
surplus widened to $16.5 billion.
The widening of China's trade
surplus from $14.5 billion in November might fuel strains with the United
States and other trading partners. They complain Beijing is hampering access to
its markets, hurting foreign companies at a time when governments worldwide are
trying to revive growth and generate new jobs.
China's relatively robust
growth has been a rare bright spot for a struggling global economy. But growth
has slowed in recent months after Beijing tightened lending and investment
curbs to prevent overheating.
A slump in demand for Chinese
goods abroad has prompted the government to reverse course and promise to help
struggling exporters and shore up growth with more bank lending and other
measures. It is unclear what impact they will have.
China is one of the biggest
importers, making any slowdown unwelcome news for Asian suppliers of industrial
components and commodities producers such as Australia and Brazil that depend
on Chinese demand for iron ore and coal.
December imports were $158.2
billion while exports were $174.7 billion.
China's rapid economic growth
slowed to 9.1 percent in the three months ending in September from 9.6 percent
the previous quarter and 2010's double-digit expansion.
The International Monetary Fund
is forecasting 9.5 percent growth for 2011 — by far the highest of any major
economy. But export weakness has forced thousands of small companies into
bankruptcy, raising concern among Chinese leaders about job losses and unrest.
Manufacturing and export orders
fell in November and December, according to industry surveys.
Chinese export growth has
fallen steadily since August as Europe's debt crisis and high U.S. unemployment
hurt demand. But it has stayed in double digits, showing the competitive
strength of Chinese exporters in global markets.
Beijing faces pressure abroad
over currency controls that Washington and other governments say keep its yuan
undervalued, giving its exporters an unfair advantage and hurting foreign
competitors. The communist government has allowed the yuan to rise in value in
recent years but has resisted pressure for faster action, spurring demands by
some U.S. lawmakers for punitive tariffs on Chinese goods.
For the full year, China's
exports rose 20.3 percent to $1.9 trillion while imports gained 24.9 percent to
$1.7 trillion. The 2011 global trade surplus was $155.2 billion, down 34
percent from 2010's $190 billion.
JOE McDONALD | AP
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