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China Exports Jump 21.8%, Surplus Hits $214B
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China’s exports rose sharply to start 2026, lifting the trade surplus to nearly $214 billion despite weaker shipments to the U.S. The data indicates external demand remains strong while domestic rebalancing remains limited ahead of President Trump’s March 31–April 2 Beijing visit.
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KEY NUMBERS
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- 21.8% export growth to $657 billion: January-February outbound shipments accelerated versus the same period a year earlier.
- Nearly $214 billion trade surplus: The surplus widened even as imports also increased strongly.
- $1.2 trillion 2025 trade surplus: Last year’s record surplus set a high base, but 2026 started with further expansion.
- 11% drop in exports to the U.S.: Tariffs reduced shipments to the U.S., but not enough to derail overall export momentum.
- 4.5%–5.0% 2026 growth target: Beijing lowered its GDP goal while avoiding major new consumer stimulus measures.
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WHAT IT MEANS
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The probability of continued trade friction remains high as China’s surplus is still expanding despite existing tariffs. U.S. import share from China could rise if tariff differentials narrow after recent court action and tariff changes. Policy odds still favor export dependence over near-term domestic stimulus, given the lower growth target and limited new consumption support. That raises the likelihood that trade, tariffs, and imbalance concerns dominate the Trump-Xi agenda.
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