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		China's exports jump 5.8% in June as tariffs reprieve prompts a rush of 
		orders
		[July 14, 2025]  By 
		ELAINE KURTENBACH 
		BANGKOK (AP) — China’s exports accelerated in June as a reprieve on U.S. 
		tariffs prompted a rush of orders by companies and consumers ahead of an 
		August deadline.
 Exports climbed 5.8% from a year earlier, up from a 4.8% rise in May. 
		Imports also recovered, growing 1.1% in the first increase so far this 
		year, according to customs data released Monday.
 
 Exports to the United States fell 16%, but that was less than half the 
		34.5% drop seen in May.
 
 After U.S. President Donald Trump imposed tariffs of up to 245% on 
		imports from China and Beijing responded with its own steep import 
		duties, the two sides agreed to a truce to allow time for talks.
 
 The retailers and other importers that had largely halted shipments of 
		shoes, clothes, toys, and other items due to new tariffs then resumed 
		imports from China.
 
 But preliminary discussions between the two sides have yet to produce 
		significant progress and sudden changes in policy have raised 
		uncertainty for companies trying to plan ahead.
 
		
		 
		In the meantime, the Trump administration has hiked tariffs on imports 
		from China by 30%, pending an Aug. 12 deadline for reverting to the 
		higher tariffs Washington and Beijing have delayed for now. 
		The recovery in trade is expected to help boost economic growth in the 
		April to June quarter. The Chinese government is due to report those 
		figures on Tuesday.
 Still, the outlook is less upbeat, noted Zichun Huang of Capital 
		Economics, noting that “tariffs are likely to remain high and Chinese 
		manufacturers face growing constraints on their ability to rapidly 
		expand global market share by slashing prices.
 
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            An earth mover transports soil at a construction site in Beijing, 
			China, Friday, July 11, 2025. (AP Photo/Mahesh Kumar A.) 
            
			
			
			 “We therefore expect export growth 
			to slow over the coming quarters, weighing on economic growth,” 
			Huang said in a report. Data for the first six months of the year showed 
			that while the trade war with the U.S. heated up following Trump's 
			return to the White House, China's global trade kept growing.
 Total trade including exports and imports hit a record of more than 
			20 trillion yuan ($2.8 trillion) as Chinese businesses diversified 
			their overseas production and export markets. China's global trade 
			surplus in the first half of the year hit $586 billion.
 
 Exports to Southeast Asia grew 13% year-on-year in January to June, 
			with shipments to Thailand up 22%, to Vietnam up nearly 20% and to 
			India up more than 18%.
 
 Trade with Europe also was brisk, climbing 6.6% in the first half of 
			the year from a year earlier.
 
 But auto exports fell after the European Union imposed higher 
			tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles, sinking nearly 38% from a 
			year earlier. Exports of auto parts fell more than 23%.
 
 ___
 
 AP researcher Yu Bing in Beijing contributed.
 
			
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