The Ministry of Commerce will take further steps to rein in
surging trade surplus this year, said Bo Xilai, minister of commerce.
Many policies are being mulled, Bo said, but failed to provide further
details.
China's surging trade surplus was led by unbalanced structure
of export, but the trade balance was in a normal scope, Bo was quoted as saying
by China Securities Journal.
Bo said, "We have noticed that China's
trade surplus was high last year, so we have set it a target to maintain a
balance between international income and expenses, and pursue a balance in
international trade."
However, Bo said, trade surplus has been a target
every trade partner pursues.
In terms of trade balance, China's trade
surplus only accounted for 10 percent of the country's total imports and
exports, Bao said. "Generally speaking, the trade surplus is within normal
scope."
If unbalanced trade means the proportion of trade surplus to the
total trade volume is higher than 10 percent, it is known that Germany and Japan
have reported a ratio higher than 10 percent for more than 10 years, Bo said.
China's trade surplus surged by 74 percent year-on-year to reach 177.47 billion U.S. dollars last year.
In January this year, China's trade surplus was 15.9 billion U.S. dollars, lower
than the 21 billion U.S. dollars for December of 2006 but still moving up by
over 60 percent year-on-year.
Experts said that China's increasing trade
surplus reflected the imbalance between the country's excess economic capacity
and lower domestic demand. Some others said the fact that processing trade makes
up 50 percent of China's total trade and foreign-funded enterprises are the
major exporters, which also contributed to surging trade surplus.
To
reduce the hefty trade imbalance, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao called for efforts
to optimize mix of imports and exports, and re-balance pattern of trade growth.
To ease trade imbalance, measures should be taken to expand imports,
said Mei Xinyu, a research fellow with the International Trade and Economic
Cooperation Research Institute under the Ministry of Commerce.
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