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Explainer | China’s exports set to ‘defy’ tariffs: 5 takeaways from May trade data as shipments rose

  • China’s exports beat expectations last month despite heightened trade frictions, fuelled by surging demand from Southeast Asia

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China’s exports rose in May by 7.6 per cent from a year earlier, while imports were up 1.8 per cent last month. Photo: Xinhua
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1. Surging exports set to defy tariffs

China’s exports beat expectations and rose by 7.6 per cent from a year earlier to US$302.4 billion in May.
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Analysts at Capital Economics said China’s export values rose at the fastest year-on-year pace since April 2023, with export volumes also picking up.

“We think exports will remain strong in the coming months, defying the expansion of Western tariffs,” they said.

Junyu Tan, a regional economist for North Asia with credit insurance company Coface, said China’s exports in May expanded due to a lower base from the previous year, while shipments of cars, ships and electronics “remained solid”.

2. Domestic demand ‘imbalance’ dampens imports

China’s imports rose by 1.8 per cent from a year earlier, compared with an 8.4 per cent increase in April.

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