This episode contains segments on:
- Producer Price Index and Consumer Price Index in December and 2024;
- Foreign trade data in 2024; and
- National commerce work conference.
Listeners are also invited to join the event China’s Economic Outlook 2025: Opportunities for FIEs after the Central Economic Work Conference on 16th January in Beijing or online.
Contact:
We’d love to hear your feedback. Contact us at website@europeanchamber.com.cn.
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Read more:
China PPI, CPI December and 2024 (NBS)
https://www.stats.gov.cn/sj/sjjd/202501/t20250109_1958168.html
China foreign trade data 2024 (GACC)
http://www.customs.gov.cn/customs/302249/zfxxgk/2799825/302274/302275/6312599/index.html
http://www.customs.gov.cn/customs/302249/zfxxgk/2799825/302274/302275/6312783/index.html
National commerce work conference
https://www.mofcom.gov.cn/xwfb/bldhd/art/2025/art_0796c059fe504c5eb07376213a7aaffb.html
Chamber event: China’s Economic Outlook 2025: Opportunities for FIEs after the Central Economic Work Conference
Transcript:
RUI: Hello and welcome to China ShortCuts,
MARIANN: the European Chamber’s weekly catchup on China’s business landscape.
RUI: This episode was recorded on 15th January 2025.
(MUSIC)
RUI: Producer prices in China fell for the 27th month in a row in December, while consumer price growth continued to hover around zero, according to data released by China’s statistics bureau on 9th January.
MARIANN: Producer prices dropped 2.3 per cent compared to the same period in the previous year. The rate of decline showed a gradual easing from last year’s low point of 2.9 per cent recorded in October over the final two months of the year. In 2024, overall producer prices fell 2.2 per cent compared to the previous year.
Consumer prices edged up 0.1 per cent year-on-year in December, and 0.2 per cent in the whole of 2024. This was way below the government’s target set in the March 2024 Government Work Report, which set consumer price inflation at ‘around 3 per cent’.
(MUSIC)
RUI: Data published by China’s customs authorities on 13th January showed that the country’s trade surplus reached almost 1 trillion US dollars.
MARIANN: In dollar denominated terms, the total value of China’s exports increased 10.7 per cent year-on-year in December. The annual export growth was 5.9 per cent. Conversely, import growth was subdued both in December as well as throughout 2024. In December, the total value of imports edged up 1 per cent, following two consecutive months of decline. The annual import growth was 1.1 per cent.
The discrepancy between its exports and imports led China to reach a trade surplus of 992 billion US dollars in 2024. Some of last year’s sharp surge in exports, especially towards the end of the year, was widely attributed to export ‘front loading’, as Chinese exporters fast-tracked their shipments to the US before the new Trump administration comes into office later this month. Trump has stated that he will slap steep tariffs on goods imported to the US from China.
Customs data showed that in the last two months of 2024, the US overtook the EU as China’s second largest export market in cumulative terms. Looking at overall trade, however, the EU still maintained its position as China’s second largest trade partner, preceded only by the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which is its largest trade partner for the fourth year running.
(MUSIC)
RUI: At the two-day national commerce work conference, held in Beijing on 11th and 12th January, Chinese policymakers reinforced earlier pledges to boost consumption and attract foreign investment in the year ahead.
MARIANN: Among steps to boost consumption, discussions at the meeting focussed on the consumer goods trade-in programme, as well as the promotion of services and digital consumption. As for the task of attracting foreign investment, the meeting readout highlighted the need to build a “first-class business environment” and to leverage China’s national economic development zones to attract foreign investment.
Chinese Minister of Commerce, Wang Wentao, who delivered an annual work report at the meeting, also emphasised the need to lay the groundwork for the next five-year plan, as 2025 is the last year covered in the current, 14th Five-year Plan.
(MUSIC)
RUI: The Central Economic Work Conference, held in Beijing in December, outlined the key tasks for 2025. It called for efforts to drive the development of ‘new quality productive forces’ and to expand high standard opening up, while keeping foreign trade and foreign investment stable.
MARIANN: Meanwhile, over the past half-decade or so, an increasing number of international companies have conducted reviews of their global resilience, with their China operations seen as being particularly exposed to various risk factors and increasing trade tensions. The trend of companies diversifying their supply chains has also become more pronounced.
RUI: Join the European Chamber’s event China Economic Outlook 2025 online on 16th January, to hear economists, think tankers and policy experts decode China’s economic landscape and explore some of the opportunities for foreign-invested enterprises in 2025.
(MUSIC)
MARIANN: Thanks for listening, and don’t forget to tune in again next week.
RUI: In the meantime, please find useful links in the episode notes.