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China recorded a trade deficit for the first three months of 2011 and a surplus of just $140 million for March. Still, analysts expect China to show a global trade surplus for the year of $160 billion to $200 billion. Last year, China ran a trade surplus of about $16 billion a month. Regulators have tightened curbs on lending and investment to rein in a boom that has driven demand for imported iron ore, oil, machinery and other goods. Imports in April were $144.3 billion but growth slumped to 21.8 percent from March's rapid 32.6 percent expansion. Exports surged 29.9 percent to $155.7 billion, reflecting stronger global demand. The wider trade surplus suggests Beijing is making only limited progress in efforts to rebalance China's economy away from reliance on trade and investment by boosting domestic consumption. High commodity prices also have depressed Chinese demand. Crude oil imports for the first four months of this year fell 9.1 percent from the same period of 2010 despite growth in auto sales. ___ Online: China General Administration of Customs:
http://www.customs.gov.cn/
[Associated
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