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TRADE between China and Japan is expected to continue
growing rapidly in the second half of this year and could
reach US$100 billion for 2002 as a whole.
In the first seven months of this year, the amount
increased 8.8 percent year-on-year to US$53.9 billion,
according to Chinese customs statistics.
Exports from China to Japan increased by 3.1 percent to
US$25.7 billion and imports from Japan rose 14.5 percent to
US$28.2 billion.
Chinese officials said they expect bilateral trade to
rise to more than US$90 billion but an economic official with
the Japanese Embassy in China said trade could reach US$100
billion, based on an analysis of Japanese statistics.
Sino-Japanese trade reached a record high of US$43.6
billion in the first half of this year, up 12.7 percent from
the same months last year, according to Japanese statistics
that do not include trade between Japan and Chinese Hong Kong
or Macao.
In the first six months of this year, Japan’s overall
exports dropped by 7 percent year-on-year and its imports
declined by 14.2 percent but the country’s exports to China
maintained a double-digit growth rate.
China is now Japan’s second-largest trading partner after
the United States and it became the largest importer of
Japanese goods and services in the first half of this year.
The growth rate of Japanese exports to China has been
accelerating after China implemented tariff cuts in the wake
of its entry into the World Trade Organization. Japanese
investment in China has increased and the Japanese yen has
depreciated.
Japanese statistics show that Japan’s exports to China
rose by 11 percent year-on-year to US$17.2 billion in the
first half of this year. The expansion of investment in China
has greatly boosted Japan’s exports of raw materials,
machinery and parts to China.
Japanese-funded companies in China have been expanding
rapidly and have shown an increasing demand for
metal-processing machinery, construction machinery, transport
machinery and machine tools.
Japan’s exports of cars, steel, chemicals, organic
compounds and raw materials also soared in the first half of
the year.
But Japan’s imports of Chinese products have not kept
pace and even fell 0.8 percent to US$27.9 billion in the first
half of the year.
(SD-Agencies)
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