China April Exports Down 22.6%, Investments Up 30.5%
By wchung | 11 May, 2009
China’s exports plunged 22.6 percent in April from the year before in the sixth straight monthly decline, the government said Tuesday, while a torrent in bank lending meant to ward off the economic downturn pushed up spending on factories, real estate and other fixed assets.
April’s decline in exports, to $91.9 billion, was bigger than the 17 percent drop in March and suggests China’s trade sector has yet to see much relief from the prolonged drought in demand brought on by the global downturn.
China’s economy — the world’s third-largest after the U.S. and Japan — relies heavily on exports for growth.
Imports fell 23 percent to $78.8 billion, the Customs Administration reported, putting China’s trade surplus for April at $13.1 billion. That compared with an $18.6 billion surplus in March.
Meanwhile, investment in factories and property development jumped 30.5 percent from a year earlier in the first four months of the year, to 3.71 trillion yuan ($543.2 billion), thanks to a slew of bank loans for government stimulus projects.
The growth rate was 1.9 percentage points higher than in January-March, the National Statistics Bureau said.
5/11/2009 11:28 PM SHANGHAI (AP)
Recent Articles
- Trump Calls Housing Bill 'a Big Yawn,' Presses Voting Curbs
- Uber, Waymo End Robotaxi Partnership in Phoenix
- US Topped 2025 Global CO2 Emissions Growth
- S. Korea Favored by Global Firms Growing Wary of China and India
- Questionable French Fast-Fashion Law Seeks to Curb Shein and Temu
- Polestar Assures Owners of Continued Service After Recent US Decision
- Roy Choi’s Food Truck Made Him a Culinary Icon
- Japan’s Heartbreak in Houston, LPGA and PGA Standouts, and Imai Ignited
- CXMT Wins $3 Billion Memory Supply Deal with Tencent
- Geely to Ship First Lotus EVs to Canada in July Under Carney-Xi Deal
