However, that surplus suffered a strong decline from 2009 to 2011, dropping to $158 billion, but then continued to gradually increase in the next years. The 2014 surplus was $380 billion, and in 2015 $636 billion.
Recently China has been taking several measures to maintain its foreign exchange reserves to a certain level so that the exchange rate between the renminbi and other currencies would be also maintained; these measures were mainly to keep obtaining merchandise trade surplus, large scale FDI (Foreign Direct Investment) inflows, and large purchases of foreign currencies. China’s foreign exchange rate stood at $3.56 trillion as of August 2015 and were the largest reserves in the world.
China has had many trade partners over the years, but only a few remain as China’s largest and most important trade partners; these include the USA, Hong Kong, South Korea, Taiwan, the 10 nations that constitute the ASEAN (Association of South east Asian Nations) trading bloc, and the EU (European union) association which includes 28 …show more content…
Thanks to all these trade partners, China could maintain trade surpluses almost with every country. Moreover, several countries that import Chinese products through Hong Kong perceive their origin to China, this causes statistical differences and issues for China and Hong Kong’s trade data. When it comes to the main Chinese products for export, China has been the largest producer of low cost labor intensive products. Conversely Chinese imports are made of parts of products that are assembled and turned into finished products in China. Major exports include machinery, electrical machinery, furniture and bedding, and textiles, while major imports include electrical machinery, mineral fuel, machinery, and minerals, which are mainly imported by South