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China Reports Exports Fell Further in March Amid Shutdown  


In this Monday, April 13, 2020, photo, a man wearing a mask against the new coronavirus checks his phone as a container ship cruises along the Yangtze River in Wuhan in Central China's Hubei province. China's exports fell further in March compared…
In this Monday, April 13, 2020, photo, a man wearing a mask against the new coronavirus checks his phone as a container ship cruises along the Yangtze River in Wuhan in Central China's Hubei province. China's exports fell further in March compared…

Exports to the United States fell from 20.8% to $25.2 billion while imports of American goods declined 12.6% to $9.9 billion.

China's trade improved in March but was below last year's levels. Forecasters warned Chinese exporters face another slump as the coronavirus pandemic depresses global demand.

Customs data reported Tuesday showed exports sank 6.6% from a year earlier to $185.1 billion, an improvement over the 17.2% contraction in January and February. Imports declined 0.4% to $165.2 billion, recovering from a 4% fall in January and February after Beijing started reopening factories and stores.

Exports to the United States fell 20.8% to $25.2 billion while imports of American goods declined 12.6% to $9.9 billion. Measured by volume, Chinese imports rose more than the financial figures indicated due to declining prices for oil and other commodities.

The ruling Communist Party is trying to revive Chinese industries, but their key export markets in the United States and Europe have closed stores and told shoppers to stay home.

``The recovery in exports is likely to be short-lived,'' Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics said in a report. ``Foreign demand will slump this quarter as COVID-19 weighs on economic activity outside of China.''

Trade was poised for a boost after Beijing and Washington removed punitive tariffs on some of each other's goods in a truce signed in January. But that was offset by Chinese anti-virus controls that shut down much of the world's second-largest economy in late January.

The ruling Communist Party is trying to revive industry after declaring victory over the virus that emerged in central China in December. Factories, shopping malls, restaurants and office buildings have reopened, but anti-disease controls including fever checks still are in place.

``The global economy faces mounting downward pressure. Uncertainties are on the rise,'' said a customs agency statement. ``China's foreign trade is encountering bigger difficulties.''

In the first three months of the year, exports tumbled 13.3% to $478.2 billion. Imports were off 2.9% at $465 billion.

Measured by volume, Chinese imports rose more than the financial figures indicated due to declining prices for oil and other commodities.

Oil imports rose 5% from a year earlier, natural gas increased 1.8% and iron ore gained 1.3%, a customs spokesman, Li Kuiwen, at a news conference.

Soybean imports rose 6.2% from a year earlier to 17.8 million tons, Li said.

Li did not say what share of the total was from the United States. Soybeans are the biggest U.S. export to China. Beijing temporarily suspended purchases due to their tariff war but resumed them late last year.

Until the virus outbreak, Chinese trade had been unexpectedly resilient despite Beijing's tariff war with President Donald Trump over its technology ambitions and trade surplus. Last year's exports rose 0.5% over 2018.

China told exporters to pursue other markets in Asia, Europe and Africa after Trump slapped punitive duties on their goods starting in 2018. Beijing retaliated by raising tariffs on American soybeans and other goods.

Some of those penalties were rolled back after the two sides signed a ``Phase 1'' agreement in January. Washington canceled additional planned tariff hikes and Beijing promised to buy more American farm exports.

Chinese imports usually surge after the Lunar New Year holiday as factories restock after shutting down for two weeks or longer.

This year's rebound was postponed after the holiday was extended by at least one week — more in some places — to keep factories and offices closed as authorities tried to contain the spread of the coronavirus.

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