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TRADE WARS
China to target emerging countries as exports slip
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Dec 7, 2011


China will seek to boost exports to emerging economies next year in the face of "severe challenges" caused by downturns in Europe and the United States, a senior official said Wednesday.

To cushion the impact on exports -- a major engine of growth -- Beijing will target developing countries that are growing strongly, said Wang Shouwen, director of the commerce ministry's foreign trade department.

"Next year I think that we will face severe challenges in our exports and imports," Wang told reporters at the release of a white paper on foreign trade marking the 10th anniversary of China joining the World Trade Organization.

"However, some developing and emerging economies are enjoying sound economic performances so we will attach more importance to exports to these countries."

Wang did not name specific countries but said Latin America and the Asian region would grow next year and "have demand" for Chinese exports.

Leading Chinese officials have painted a gloomy picture for the country's exports, warning that the eurozone debt crisis and sluggish recovery in the United States threatened the world's second largest economy.

Vice Premier Wang Qishan, China's top finance official, at the weekend urged companies to help guarantee a "stable increase" in exports amid slowing external demand.

China's exports rose 15.9 percent year on year to $157.49 billion in October, but the total was down from $169.7 billion in September, due to falling demand caused by the economic woes in Europe and the United States.

Imports expanded 28.7 percent to $140.46 billion in October, lower than the $155.2 billion recorded a month earlier.

Shipments to the European Union -- China's biggest trade partner -- fell to $28.74 billion in October from $31.61 billion in September.

Exports to the United States shrank to $28.60 billion in October from $30.11 billion in the previous month.

Shipments to developing economies such as India and Brazil fell by a lesser amount, though they accounted for a much smaller portion of the total exports.

The data, coupled with figures last week showing China's manufacturing activity contracted in November for the first time in 33 months, has caused concern that the Asian powerhouse is losing steam.

Wang told the news conference China would help companies in building brands, research and development and marketing to "allow them to be more competitive".

But he said that if the European financial crisis "does not run out of control" then China should still achieve "a considerable level of growth" in foreign trade.

In recent years China has been strengthening ties with developing economies in Asia and Latin America through trade and investment to reduce its exposure to developed markets.

Bilateral trade with South American countries has skyrocketed in the past five years by more than 160 percent, surging from $68 billion in 2006 to $178.9 billion in 2010.

Premier Wen Jiabao last month offered Southeast Asian countries $10 billion in infrastructure loans while foreign investment in China from the Asian region ballooned in the first 10 months of this year to $81.9 billion.

In stark contrast, US investment in China slumped 18.13 percent to $2.6 billion, while European Union investment increased just 1.05 percent to $5.5 billion.

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S.Africa-China trade trumped Dalai Lama visa: official
Johannesburg (AFP) Dec 7, 2011 - A senior South African official admitted that the Dalai Lama was blocked from attending Desmond Tutu's 80th birthday celebrations in October to preserve vital trade ties with China.

Home Affairs secretary-general Mkuseli Apleni said in a court affidavit quoted by the Times daily that his advice to his minister on the Tibetan spiritual leader's visa application was not to jeopardise ties with Beijing.

"In giving advice... regarding the application for a visa by the Dalai Lama, I had recourse to our trade relations with China," Apleni said, replying to two opposition parties' court challenge over the handling of the visa debacle.

The "backlash" for France and Australia "provided some learning to the government and the sensitivities that were attendant" to allowing the visit by the Dalai Lama, whom China considers a dangerous separatist, said Apleni.

French and Australian heads of state met separately with the Tibetan spiritual leader in 2008, souring diplomatic relations with China.

China is South Africa's biggest trade partner with exports from Africa's biggest economy reaching $4.9 billion (3.7 billion euros) in the first six months of the year.

The Dalai Lama called off his trip days ahead of Tutu's birthday in October, saying he had received no news about his visa, two years after South Africa already denied him a visa over fears of jeopardising ties with China.

Apleni insisted that the home affairs minister had not acted "under the dictates of China," but "further took into account the fact that the deputy president had just conducted a successful visit to China."

The country also felt indebted to China for orchestrating South Africa's invitation to join BRICS, the group of developing giants Brazil, Russia, India and China.

Opposition parties the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) and the Congress of the People (Cope) filed papers in the Cape High Court the same month. The case is still before court.

South Africa never publicly announced whether it would grant a visa to the Dalai Lama, who was scheduled to give a speech to mark Tutu's 80th birthday.

The Dalai Lama cancelled the trip, saying he had received no news about his visa, provoking a furious reply from Tutu who called President Jacob Zuma's administration "worse than the apartheid government" for bowing to China and ignoring the values of the liberation movement.



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