Yiwu sees
first drop in export to U.S.
China's largest distribution
center for small commodities Yiwu recorded a 4.07
percent year-on-year drop in export to the United States
in the first quarter, the first decline since the
marketplace was launched three decades ago.
Yiwu exported $48.47 million
worth of goods to the United States in the first
quarter, after its export to that country surged 35.2
percent last year to $255.52 million, according the
local bureau of industry and commerce.
The decline was a result of a
number of factors, including the subprime crisis, the
tight monetary policy adopted by China, renminbi
appreciation, price rises of raw material, the ice and
snow crisis early this year and the market's closure for
the Spring Festival, according to an observer with the
Yiwu Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation Bureau.
China's largest hosiery
manufacturer Zhejiang Mengna Knitting Co Ltd said that
the U.S. subprime crisis was being felt more in the
eastern Chinese town.
"U.S. clients began to delay
payment in January. They were telling us to postpone
transport of goods, saying they still had some in stock,
while they used to hurry us to do so," Mengna's export
director Zhang Xiaojun said.
Some small-sized businesses
were under greater pressure, as their profits that were
usually low could evaporate as renminbi appreciated.
They faced the loss of clients when raising prices.
The Yiwu market, with more
than 50,000 stalls, reported a trade volume of 3.48
billion yuan ($497.14 million) last year.
Source: Xinhua/China Daily