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- SPSS Base 10 Applications Guide

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- Government Finance Statistics Yearbook: 2003 (Government Finance Statistics Yearbook)

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- The Essentials of Business Statistics II (Essentials)

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WTO 2003 International Trade Statistics: 2003
Manufacturer: Bernan Press
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Hardcover
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ASIN: 089059872X |
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- Trade stats 2003
- China: Trading Giant
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World Trade Organization 2003: International Trade Statistics 2003 (Wto World Trade Organization Annual Report)
Manufacturer: World Trade Organization
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback
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ASIN: 9287012350 |
Customer Reviews:
Trade stats 2003.......2004-01-23
China is now America's third largest trade partner. In 2003, the US did $400 billion of trade with Canada, $240 billion with Mexico, and $180 billion with China. Japan's trade with America amounted to $170 billion, Germany under $100 billion, and Britain $75 billion. Five of America's top ten trade partners are Asian: China, Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and Malaysia (surprise). Only three were from Europe: Germany, Britain, and France.
Trade growth between America and China is extremely fast. Within a decade, maybe even in five years' time, China will replace Mexico to become America's second largest trade partner. By 2025 - perhaps before - China will be America's number one trade partner.
China: Trading Giant.......2004-01-17
The 2002 trade statistics are very instructive. In total (exports + imports) merchandise trade, China did $621 billion, about 6% of the world total. That might not sound like much until you consider that Japan's share is only 8%. Indeed, if the EU is counted as one unit (thus intra-EU trade is not counted), then China is the world's fourth largest trading nation, after the US, EU and Japan, in merchandise. China's 20% a year growth means the country will overtake Japan's #3 position in two to three years.
If both goods and services are counted, then China did about $702 billion of trade in 2002. That's a lot less than America's $2,382 billion. (But Japan's figure is only $922 billion.) Since there are no figures for extra-EU trade in services, China was, in both goods and services, the world's SIXTH largest trader, after the US, Germany, Japan, Britain, and France, in that order. China can beat Japan in no more than three years if it continues this phenomenal rate of growth.
So that leaves China as the world's number three trading nation, after the US and Germany, OR after the EU and the US, in a couple of years. (China's growth in services trade is a strong 13% - services trade is a lot smaller than goods trade for all countries except Luxembourg.)
Not a bad performance for a country which only 25 years ago did next to no trade with the outside world.
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