Staff of Reuters 3 Minutes to Read BEIJING, China (Reuters) – In June, China’s exports surged at a considerably quicker rate than projected, as viral outbreaks and port delays were overshadowed by strong global demand fueled by lessening lockdown measures and vaccination campaigns throughout the world. A man drives a vehicle carrying a container at a logistics center near Tianjin port on December 12, 2019, in Tianjin, China. Yilei Sun/Yilei Sun/Yilei Sun/Yilei Sun/Yile Imports also outperformed forecasts, with prices raised by high raw material costs, according to customs statistics released on Tuesday. The world’s largest exporter has made a decent economic recovery from the coronavirus-induced recession in the first few months of 2019 thanks to Beijing’s efforts in substantially curbing the epidemic earlier than its trade partners. In recent months, China’s trade performance has been hampered by a global semiconductor shortage, transportation bottlenecks, and increasing raw material and freight costs. Nonetheless, global relaxations in COVID-19 lockdown measures and vaccination campaigns appeared to support a large increase in global demand for Chinese commodities. In dollar terms, exports increased 32.2 percent in June compared to a year ago, compared to a 27.9% increase in May. Reuters polled analysts, who predicted a 23.1 percent increase. The robust cargo numbers reflected certain positive factory surveys conducted in other countries. In June, a measure of manufacturing activity in the United States reached a new high, while business growth in the Eurozone advanced at its quickest rate in 15 years. [nL2N2O42C6 nL2N2O50ED] [nL2N2O42C6 nL2N2O50ED] Imports surged 36.7 percent year over year last month, topping a prediction of 30.0 percent but decreasing from a 51.1 percent increase in May, which was the greatest rate in a decade. Last month, China had a $51.53 billion trade surplus, compared to the poll’s prediction of $44.2 billion and the $45.54 billion surplus in May. Last month, a small coronavirus outbreak in one of China’s major export centers in southern Guangdong Province was brought under control. Exporters, on the other hand, are dealing with greater raw material and freight prices, as well as logistical difficulties. Coal, steel, iron ore, and copper prices have soared this year, fueled by the lifting of pandemic quarantines in several nations and sufficient global liquidity. Stella Qiu and Gabriel Crossley contributed reporting, while Shri Navaratnam edited the piece./nRead More