Is China understating its own export success?
The $230bn puzzle at the heart of the country’s trade figures

China’s current-account surplus was once one of the most controversial statistics in economics. The figure, which peaked at almost 10% of gdp in 2007, measures the gap between China’s earning and its spending, driven largely by its trade surplus and the income it receives from its foreign assets. For much of the past two decades, China’s surpluses have left it open to the charge of mercantilism—of stealing jobs by unfairly boosting its exports. Some trading partners now worry about a similar shock if the country’s output of electric vehicles grows too quickly.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Trade blows”
Finance & economics
December 16th 2023- How to sneak billions of dollars out of China
- Is China understating its own export success?
- The mystery of Britain’s dirt-cheap stockmarket
- Vladimir Putin is running Russia’s economy dangerously hot
- Why stockpickers should get out more
- Europe’s economy is in a bad way. Policymakers need to react
- How to put boosters under India’s economy

From the December 16th 2023 edition
Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents
Explore the edition
America and China prepare for an Alpine trade clash
Might tariffs fall from their mountainous highs?

Buy the dip: the trend that keeps stocks from crashing
Retail investors now play a useful role at times of panic

Warren Buffett’s $348bn question for his successor
The next Berkshire Hathaway CEO has a mountain of cash to invest
Don’t blame imports for the fall in America’s GDP
Why what you’ve read about the trade deficit hurting growth is wrong
Why economists should like booze
A martini doesn’t just steady the nerves after a rollercoaster week
The risky world of private assets opens up to retail investors
Fund managers smell an opportunity to get even bigger