Chinese FDI falls in February
BEIJING - Agence France-Presse
Tourists look out from a building in the financial center of Pudong in Shanghai. AFP Photo
Foreign direct investment in China fell in February for the fourth straight month as key Western economies continue to struggle, official figures showed yesterday.Investment from overseas companies fell 0.9 percent in February from a year earlier to $7.73 billion, the commerce ministry said, compared with $10 billion in January. In the first two months of the year, inward investment fell 0.56 percent year-on-year to $17.72 billion.
Investment from the European Union, which is grappling with a sovereign debt crisis, fell 33.32 percent on year to $906 million in the first two months, although US firms invested $525 million in the same period, up 0.87 percent.
Weaknes in key partners
Europe and the United States are key trade partners of China and weakness in their economies has been hurting the Asian powerhouse, which relies heavily on exports and investment to drive its economy.
China swung to a huge trade deficit of $31.48 billion in February as the West’s economic troubles hurt demand for Chinese-made products. But commerce ministry spokesman Shen Danyang said yesterday that exports were typically weaker in the first few months of the year and China would return to a surplus soon.
“Our judgment is that the trade deficit is unlikely to continue,” Shen said.