| Gov't should try new approach to address trade imbalance (Xinhua)
 Updated: 2006-09-12 10:12
 The government must try a new tactic to ease its trade 
imbalance, according to Chinese economic experts, following news that the trade 
surplus hit a record 18.8 billion U.S. dollars for the month of August, the 
third monthly record in succession.
 "Restraining exports is not a smart option because rapid export growth is 
healthy and good for the Chinese economy, " said Dr. Shen Danyang, 
vice-president of the International Trade and Economic Research Institute under 
the Ministry of Commerce, said on Monday. "Expanding imports would be better 
approach."
 
 Over the past four years, China has removed all export 
subsidies, slashed the average export tax rebates to 12 percent and imposed 
export tariffs on sensitive textile products.
 
 "Stretching export control 
will not alleviate the trade imbalance," Shen said, stressing that rapid growth 
in both exports and imports is inevitable for an expanding economy.
 
 The 
East Asian countries have set a good example in the 1970s, he said.
 
 Citing statistics from the United Nations Trade and Development 
Conference, Shen said that the average annual growth rate of the Republic of 
Korea's exports was 31.9 percent while the import growth rate was 29.1 percent.
 
 China's data shows that the country's exports surged 25.9 percent from 
January to August to 599.63 billion U.S. dollars while the imports amounted to 
504.98 billion U.S. dollars, up 21.6 percent." There is still space for further 
expansion," Shen said.
 
 Refuting the argument that rocketing imports and 
exports would consolidate China's dependence on foreign trade and endanger 
China's economy, Shen stressed that no country had found its economy jeopardized 
by a high dependence on foreign trade.
 
 The economic dependence on 
foreign trade in the world's third largest economy Germany and Asia's emerging 
economy the Republic of Korea had remained above 60 percent for years, he said.
 
 Under the global economy, countries across the world have sped up their 
foreign trade development. Statistics from the World Bank revealed that the 
world economy's dependence on exports edged up only six percent from 1820 to 
1950. Over the past five decades however, the rise was as much as 14 percent, he 
noted.
 
 "The issue which deserves our attention is not concerns over 
dependence on foreign trade but the risks caused by a decline in exports and 
flat domestic demand," Shen said.
 
 
 
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