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TRADE WARS
China's trade surplus with US inflated by trade stats: OECD-WTO
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Jan 16, 2013


China expects trade to grow at similar pace to GDP
Beijing (AFP) Jan 16, 2013 - China said Wednesday that it expects foreign trade to grow at a similar pace to the economy this year, indicating a feeble pickup from 2012.

"Our target this year is... to try to keep foreign trade increasing at a rate that is roughly in accordance with GDP growth," Shen Danyang, spokesman of the Ministry of Commerce, told reporters at a regular briefing without giving a specific figure.

China had declared it wanted to see trade grow by 10 percent in 2012, but last week announced expansion of 6.2 percent for the period, missing the target.

That was a marked slowdown from 2011, when trade increased 22.5 percent.

The world's-second largest economy is yet to announce its goal for economic growth this year. But Beijing has set a target of 7.0-percent average annual growth for the five years through 2015.

The median forecast in an AFP survey of 15 economists for economic growth this year is eight percent.

The government has mainly blamed the sluggish recovery of the world economy and rising trade protectionism for the country's failure to meet last year's trade target.

Shen cautioned that the situation this year would remain challenging.

He said China still "faces so many difficulties" including insufficient overseas demand and an unhealthy trade environment that would be "hard to turn around".

"So the general situation for foreign trade will remain severe in 2013," he said.

Current trade statistics miss a vital part of the story of where production occurs in the globalised economy, the OECD and WTO said on Wednesday, adding that China's trade surplus with the United States was overstated by a quarter.

The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development and the World Trade Organization unveiled a new database that seeks to measure the value-added in trade.

With manufacturing highly dependant on imports of raw and intermediate materials, the OECD-WTO database sought to reveal where value was being added throughout global trade.

It found that measured by value-added that China's bilateral trade surplus with the United States was over $40 billion (25 percent) smaller in 2009, and 30 percent smaller in 2005.

It said this reflected value attributable to goods China imported from the United States and Asian suppliers that China processed and ultimately sent the United States.

The OECD-WTO initiative also found that services were greatly underestimated in traditional trade statistics.

While services account for about two-thirds of output in developed economies, traditional statistics put their share in trade at less than one quarter, while on a value-added basis it rises to over 50 percent of exports for countries such as the United States, Britain and Germany.

With production chains becoming increasingly globalised, the OECD and WTO cautioned that "traditional measures of trade..., alone, may lead to misguided to misguided decisions being taken" in trade policy.

"Blocking imports will damage a country own productivity growth and automatically damage its competitiveness," said OECD chief Angel Guria.

The OECD-WTO calculations showed for example that a third of the value of the cars that Germany's powerhouse car industry exports is generated in other countries.

"If Germany would say 'no imports', well, no export of cars!" said Guria.

WTO Director-General Pascal Lamy said "countries that export more and best are the countries that import more and best."

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TRADE WARS
Foreign investment in China in first fall for three years
Beijing (AFP) Jan 16, 2013
Foreign direct investment in China declined for the first time in three years in 2012, official data showed on Wednesday, amid economic turmoil in developed markets and a slowdown at home. But Chinese direct investment overseas surged almost 30 percent from the previous year, with analysts saying that firms were increasingly looking to expand abroad as space for growth in China shrank. F ... read more


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