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China posts $8.43b trade deficit in 1st quarter
China's foreign trade deficit totaled US$8.43 billion in the first quarter this year because of three successive months of import growth, more than 8.2 percentage points higher than exports, latest figures from the General Administration of Customs show.
The total foreign trade volume of the first quarter totaled US$239.85 billion, up 38.2 percent over the previous year, US$115.71 billion for exports and US$124.14 billion for imports, up 34.1 percent and 42.3 percent respectively over the same period last year.
In March, China's foreign trade totaled a record US$92.24 billion, up 42.8 percent on a yearly basis and with a deficit of US$540 million.
The Administration attributed the sharp import increase to the country's sustained need for raw materials and energy.
The statistics show that general foreign trade also maintained rapid growth in the first quarter, totaling US$105.1 billion, up 34.7 percent over the previous year. General trade exports and imports totaled US$46.31 billion and US$58.78 billion in the first three months, up 27.1 percent and 41.4 percent respectively year-on-year.
Exports of mechanical and electrical products totaled US$63.66 billion, up 46.8 percent, covering 55 percent of China's foreign trade, up a slight 4.7 percentage points over 2003, according to Customs statistics.
Processing exports sped up and imports experienced steady growth in the first quarter. China exported and imported US$111.12 billion in its processing trade for quarter one, up 39.3 percent.
Foreign-funded enterprises in China also enjoyed fast growth for their imports and exports in the first quarter. Bilateral trade between China and its major trade partners developed rapidly in this period. Japan, US and EU still remained the top three trade partners of China.
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