Amid an economic slowdown and steady fall in exports that has cast a shadow over small and medium industries, China today warned of a “quite grim situation” on the country’s foreign trade front in the face of new global uncertainties.
The warning came from the Ministry of Commerce (MOC) a day after data revealed that China’s GDP growth rate slowed down to 9.1 per cent in the third quarter of 2011, the slowest pace of expansion since last year.
“The import and export situation will be quite grim in the fourth quarter of this year and next year, or at least in the first quarter of next year,” MOC spokesman, Mr Shen Danyang, told a press conference here today.
He attributed the projection of slower growth to changes in the domestic and foreign economic environment, “especially increasing instabilities and uncertainties that have affected China’s foreign trade in recent few months.”
China’s export growth slowed to 17.1 per cent year-on-year in September from 24.5 per cent growth in August, according to customs figures.
The fall in exports has apparently resulted in a number of small and medium industries, which contribute over 80 per cent of China’s cheap exports, closing down in a number of places due to dwindling exports markets amid a debt crisis in the EU and US.
China’s imports climbed 20.9 per cent in September vis-a-vis the year-ago period, compared with 30.2 per cent year-on-year expansion in August.
In September, China’s trade surplus fell for the second straight month, dropping by 12.4 per cent year-on-year.