China exports growth slows in blow to economy’s bright spot
China's export growth decelerated significantly in September, rising by only 2.4% from the previous year amid heightened trade tensions and tariffs from key markets including the EU and the US.

Exports climbed just 2.4% in dollar terms from a year earlier to almost $304 billion, the lowest level since May, the customs administration said Monday. Shipments to key markets including Japan, South Korea and Taiwan all fell, while exports to the European Union and the US marked their slowest rise in at least four months as politicians ramped up tariffs.
Russian purchases of Chinese goods soared to a record $11 billion, as Beijing continues to shield Moscow from economic isolation after Western companies producing everything from cars to phones quit President Vladimir Putin’s nation due to sanctions to punish his military aggression.

Chinese exports have powered the economy this year with shipments through September soaring to the second highest value on record. Weak consumer spending at home, however, has dampened the appetite for foreign products spurring a record trade surplus, and prompting US President Joe Biden and others to impose trade curbs.

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President Xi Jinping’s officials have unleashed a stimulus blitz of rate cuts, measures to support the property sector and promises of greater government borrowing in recent weeks in a bid to revive growth. That could lift demand for imports and help Beijing’s battle to boost inflation. A measure of economy-wide prices is currently stuck in its longest deflationary streak since 1999, which has pushed down export prices.


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