FUZHOU, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- The two-way trade between southeast China's
Fujian Province and Africa countries rose 33.4 percent year-on-year to reach
1.89 billion U.S. dollars last year, local customs statistics show.
The coastal Chinese province exported 1.72 billion dollars worth of
products to Africa in 2007, up 34.8 percent from a year earlier, chiefly
machinery and electronic products and garments, statistics with the Fuzhou
Customs show.
Fujian imported 170 million dollars worth products from Africa last year,
up 20.2 percent, mainly raw material of mineral products, such as marble and
granite, statistics show.
South Africa, Egypt, Nigeria and Morocco were the four largest trading
partner of Fujian, among 59 African countries and regions with which the Chinese
province has established trade ties. The four markets contributed 60.8 percent
to the total trade between Fujian and Africa last year.
"Chinese and African economies are complementary to each other, which is
the precondition for the trade growth," a spokesman with the customs said.
He also advised Chinese businesses to actively enlarge imports from African
countries using preferential duty polices and other favorable government
polices, in a bid to promote a sustainable development for the China-Africa
trade.