September trade
deficit estimated to hit $300m
HA NOI (VNS)- The country is estimated to run a trade deficit
of US$300 million in September, according to the General Statistics Office
(GSO).
Including the
September estimate, the country ran a trade deficit of $124 million in the
first nine months. In detail, it earned $96.46 billion from exports, up 15.7
per cent against the same period last year, while spending $96.59 billion for
imports, up 15.5 per cent.
The office
reported that 15 staples gained more than $1 billion in export value.
The major import
products were components, equipment and petrol for production.
The General
Department of Customs has not yet released the first nine months'
import-export figures, which will likely differ from the GSO's. Last month,
the GSO estimated that the country ran a trade deficit of $300 million, but
customs figures showed that the country actually had a trade surplus of $600 million.
The Customs
department has only reported the import-export value for the first half of
September. According to the department, the country ran a trade deficit of
$374 million on monthly export earnings of $4.92 billion and imports spending
of $5.32 billion.
Ha Noi trade deficit
The capital city
was estimated to run a trade deficit of $1.16 billion in September, according
to the municipal statistics office.
The capital
exported $801 million worth of goods this month, decreasing 1.2 per cent
month-on-month. It spent $1.96 billion to import goods, an increase of 2.8
per cent.
In the first nine
months, the capital reaped $7.405 billion from exports, down 1.5 per cent
from the same period last year. It imported $17.230 billion worth of goods,
down 3.5 per cent year-on-year, resulting in a trade deficit of $9.825
billion.
The capital's
export staples in the first nine months of the year were computer components
and peripherals, which earned $1.407 billion, down 1.5 per cent year-on-year;
garments and textiles with $895 million, up 14.3 per cent; agricultural
products with $789 million, down 4.7 per cent and petroleum with $661
million, down 36.9 per cent.
The city mainly
imported petroleum for $4.229 billion, down 17.9 per year-on-year; equipment,
machinery, tools and spare parts for $3.842 billion, down 1.3 per cent and
steel for $894 million, up 14.2 per cent. - VNS
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Thứ Ba, 24 tháng 9, 2013
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