The total volume of bilateral trade in the Jan-Jun period reached US$43.92 billion, up 13.4 percent over the same period last year, and the “International Trade" analyzed that Sino-Japan trade is expected to hit a record high of US$95 billion in the whole of 2001 if there is no drastic change in the Yen Foreign Exchange Market in the coming six months.
Despite the obvious slowdown in the world economic growth and the severity of the general trade environment, Sino-Japan bilateral trade still reported a fairly great growth in the first half of this year. Both import and export volume presented a two-digital increase. Although there will be some unfavorable factors in the second half of the year, it is still possible to create a new record for the whole year as long as the two governments adopt a consultative and promotional policy.
According to official Japanese statistics, the total volume of bilateral trade in the Jan-Jun period reached US$43.92 billion, up 13.4 percent over the same period last year. Of the total, Japan's export to China came to US$15.55 billion, up 15.3 percent; and imports, US$28.37 billion, up 12.4 percent.
In the first half of this year, Japan's gross exports decreased by 0.1 percent, while its exports to China witnessed a considerable growth of almost 30 percent, the growth rate of its imports from China also exceeded 20 percent, thus making China its second largest trade partner.
The report specially mentioned that there were two salient characteristics in the Sino-Japan trade in the first half of the year: first, Japan's exports of electromechanical products to China saw a substantial growth.
The growth rate of the exports of such electromechanical products as communication, construction, transportation, office, precision and shipping equipment reached as high as 50-100 percent, a rarely seen growth for many years. This development indicates that there is not much change in the stable, mutually complementary economic and trade relations between China and Japan, Japanese enterprises' investment in China has been notably restored, giving rise to a new situation featuring the simultaneous expansion of investment and export. Although some frictions in China-Japan trade plus the continued cooling of the world economy have emerged in the second half of the year which will produce adverse effect on Sino-Japanese trade, Japanese enterprises' enthusiasm for investment cooperation with China is on the rise against the general background of China's impending accession to the WTO.
“International Trade" analyzed that Sino-Japan trade is expected to hit a record high of US$95 billion in the whole of 2001 if there is no drastic change in the Yen Foreign Exchange Market in the coming six months.
(People’s Daily 08/04/2001)