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The International Monetary Fund is forecasting 9.5 percent growth for 2011
-- by far the highest of any major economy. But export weakness has forced thousands of small companies into bankruptcy, raising concern among Chinese leaders about job losses and unrest. Manufacturing and export orders fell in November and December, according to industry surveys. Chinese export growth has fallen steadily since August as Europe's debt crisis and high U.S. unemployment hurt demand. But it has stayed in double digits, showing the competitive strength of Chinese exporters in global markets. Beijing faces pressure abroad over currency controls that Washington and other governments say keep its yuan undervalued, giving its exporters an unfair advantage and hurting foreign competitors. The communist government has allowed the yuan to rise in value in recent years but has resisted pressure for faster action, spurring demands by some U.S. lawmakers for punitive tariffs on Chinese goods. For the full year, China's exports rose 20.3 percent to $1.9 trillion while imports gained 24.9 percent to $1.7 trillion. The 2011 global trade surplus was $155.2 billion, down 34 percent from 2010's $190 billion. ___ Online: General Administration of Customs of China:
http://www.customs.gov.cn/
[Associated
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