China Trade Surge Dispels Growth Fears
By wchung | 07 Jun, 2026
In this photo taken Friday June 4, 2010, Chinese port workers walk past containers stacked up at a port in Jinjiang in southeast China's Fujian province. (AP Photo)
China’s imports and exports both surged by nearly 50 percent in May over a year earlier in a positive sign for growth in the third-largest economy.
Exports rose 48.5 percent in May, while imports were up 48.3 percent, the Chinese customs agency reported Thursday.
The data might help to temper concerns that China’s economy may slow due to the European debt crisis and lending curbs imposed by Beijing to cool surging housing prices.
The strong export growth also might help clear the way for the government to allow China’s currency, the yuan to rise. The yuan has been held steady against the dollar since late 2008 to help exporters compete amid weak demand but Washington and other trading partners want Beijing to ease its controls, which they say are distorting trade.
Import growth eased slightly from April’s 49.7 percent surge, but the expansion in exports accelerated from April’s 30.5 percent level.
AP BEIJING
Recent Articles
- OpenAI Plans ChatGPT 'Superapp' Overhaul Ahead of IPO
- Your Answers to These 7 Questions Will Reveal Whether You're Sane or a Closet Lunatic
- US Oil Companies Profit from Strait of Hormuz Closure Says Russian Oil CEO
- Trump Faces New Republican Resistance in Congress as Midterms Approach
- What Japan Gets Right About Everyday Life
- SpaceX IPO Already Two Times Oversubscribed
- SpaceX Signs Google As AI Compute Client After Landing Anthropic
- $1 Trillion in Stock Market Valuation Erased by AI Chip Selloff
- Anthropic Urges Industry Pause As AI Nears Recursive Self-Development
- Trump's South Lawn UFC Birthday Bash to Mix Politics with Punches
