China
to become world's second largest trade power
China will become the world's second
largest trading power within the next few years behind the United
States if it keeps up its current rapid growth, a top Chinese
official was quoted as saying recently.
The China Business Times cited
Sham Qingjiang, director of the science and technology department
in the Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation, Shan
noted that in 1989 China ranked 15th in world trade, but by
last year had become the globe's sixth largest importer and
exporter.
Foreign trade in the world's most
populous market had been growing at a much higher rate than
the world average for the past 12 year Shan said.
According to figures complied by
Beijing last year, every person in the world owns at least one
pair of shoes and 2.8 items of clothing made in China, it added.
Beginning last year, China has also witnessed rapid growth in
exports of higher end products such as the mobile phone handsets,
computer monitors and air conditioners, it said.
China already ranks as the number
one exporter of many labour incentive products such as garments,
shoes, clocks and bicycles, the report said.
Thai
economy grows
Thailand's economy grew by 5.5
percent in the third quarter, pushing the full year forecast
to the high end of the 4.0-4.5 percent range tipped for 2002,
the official records keeper said recently. National Economic
and Social Development Board secretary general Chakramon Phasukvanich
said the expansion in the three months to September was on the
back of high exports and strong domestic consumption. The result,
which beat official expectations of year-on-year growth below
5.0 percent, meant it was 'highly likely' that full year GDP
growth will come in at 4.3 percent.
Japan's
economy grows by 0.7%
Japan's economy managed to eke
out a third straight quarter of growth, expanding by 0.7 percent
in the July-September period, but worries remain that the nascent
economic recovery may prove short-lived.
The numbers released recently by
the Cabinet Office show that growth for Japan's gross domestic
product the total output of goods and services was weaker than
the 1.0 percent growth in the April-June quarter.
Government ministers acknowledged
that the recovery was slowing down but they continued to send
mixed signs about the possibility of an extra spending package,
which some politicians are pushing as vital to keep growth going.
Analysts said the GDP number look
brighter than the dismal realities because they were revised
to reflect inventory fluctuations and push up consumption indicators.
Japan's feeble recovery still depends
heavily on robust exports. Any setback in the rebounds in the
United States and elsewhere would endanger Japan's hopes for
a turnaround.
South
Korea's current account surplus triples
South Korea's current account surplus
tripled to $459.7 million in September from $150.9 million in
August on stronger exports and reduced services account deficit,
the Bank of Korea said on recently.
"A slight rise in merchandise trade
surplus and sharp falls in services account deficits combined
to help boost the current account surplus," the central bank
said.
In September 2001, the current
account surplus stood at $735.8 million, it said.
ASEAN
urged to scrap nontariff barriers
Southeast Asians nations must work
harder to scrap non-tariff barriers as part of efforts to integrate
their economics more closely, ASEAN Secretary General Rodolfo
Severino said.
Severino, quoted in a statement
from the secretariat of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations,
said ASEAN leaders recognized that regional economic integration
was the key to competitiveness in trade and investment but there
was a need for advancement.