logo
China-Arab trade volume hits $407.4 billion in 2024, up 2.3 percent YoY

China-Arab trade volume hits $407.4 billion in 2024, up 2.3 percent YoY

Economy ME3 days ago
Trade volume between China and Arab countries rose by 2.3 percent year-on-year in 2024, reaching $407.4 billion. This growth reinforces China's position as the leading trading partner for the Arab world for several consecutive years. Chinese Assistant Minister of Commerce Yuan Xiaoming reported that Chinese exports to Arab nations totaled $206 billion, while imports from these countries reached $201.4 billion.
Yuan Xiaoming highlighted the significant advancements in economic and trade cooperation over recent years, with bilateral investments extending into sectors such as metal smelting, building materials manufacturing, cotton textile production, and aquaculture. Notably, Arab sovereign wealth funds and companies have ramped up their investments in China's petrochemical, new energy, and emerging technology sectors. Infrastructure cooperation has also made remarkable strides, while emerging fields like e-commerce, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence demonstrate robust growth potential.
Read more: U.S. and China ease trade tensions with 90-day deal, tariffs cut by over 100 percent
Year-on-year performance
Additional data from China's General Administration of Customs reveals that
total trade between China and Arab League countries
surged by over 820 percent from 2004 to 2023, reaching approximately 2.8 trillion yuan (around $390.14 billion). In the first four months of 2024 alone, trade climbed 3.8 percent year-on-year to historic highs, accounting for nearly 7 percent of China's total foreign trade value during that period. The United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Oman, Qatar, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia represent the top six Arab trade partners of China, constituting about 85 percent of the total volume.
Chinese exports include automobiles and textiles, with notable year-on-year increases of 66.3 percent and 3.2 percent respectively between January and April 2024. Meanwhile, Arab countries are a significant source of energy imports for China, accounting for 38 percent of China's energy product imports in early 2024. Additionally, trade between China's private enterprises and Arab countries reached 497.14 billion yuan, reflecting a 16.3 percent increase year-on-year and making up over half of the total China-Arab trade volume in that timeframe.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump expands tariffs: See the full list of targeted countries
Trump expands tariffs: See the full list of targeted countries

Gulf Business

time16 hours ago

  • Gulf Business

Trump expands tariffs: See the full list of targeted countries

Image: Getty Images In a sweeping executive order, US President Donald Trump has expanded tariffs on imports from multiple trading partners, citing persistent trade deficits and national security concerns. The move follows Executive Order 14257, signed in April 2025, and is framed as part of a broader strategy to restore fair trade and strengthen the US economy. The new order, grounded in the International Emergency Economic Powers Act and other federal statutes, imposes additional ad valorem duties on imports from countries that Trump's administration says have failed to provide reciprocal trade access or align with U.S. economic and security priorities. 'I have received additional information… on the impact of foreign trading partners' disparate tariff rates and non-tariff barriers on US exports, the domestic manufacturing base, critical supply chains, and the defense industrial base,' Trump said in the executive order. Read: Some countries have signaled willingness to cooperate and are in the process of finalising trade and security agreements with the United States. In these cases, their goods will remain subject to additional tariffs until formal agreements are concluded. Others, however, have either failed to reach a deal or not engaged in meaningful negotiations—making them subject to new duties. For example, European Union goods with current tariff rates below 15 per cent will now face a combined duty of at least 15 per cent, while those with existing rates above 15% will not face additional charges. All countries not specifically listed in the annex will face a flat 10 per cent duty increase. Additional penalties—including a 40 per cent tariff—will apply to goods found to have been transshipped to evade these duties. The order also outlines enforcement and monitoring mechanisms, directing US agencies to update and revise the Harmonized Tariff Schedule and track potential circumvention schemes. The White House described the action as essential to maintaining the United States' economic and national security, particularly in light of ongoing global supply chain disruptions and shifting geopolitical alliances. Here's the full list of countries impacted under the new tariff order: Countries and Territories Reciprocal Tariff, Adjusted Afghanistan 15% Algeria 30% Angola 15% Bangladesh 20% Bolivia 15% Bosnia and Herzegovina 30% Botswana 15% Brazil 10% Brunei 25% Cambodia 19% Cameroon 15% Chad 15% Costa Rica 15% Côte d`Ivoire 15% Democratic Republic of the Congo 15% Ecuador 15% Equatorial Guinea 15% European Union: Goods with Column 1 Duty Rate 0% European Union: Goods with Column 1 Duty Rate < 15% 15% minus Column 1 Duty Rate Falkland Islands 10% Fiji 15% Ghana 15% Guyana 15% Iceland 15% India 25% Indonesia 19% Iraq 35% Israel 15% Japan 15% Jordan 15% Kazakhstan 25% Laos 40% Lesotho 15% Libya 30% Liechtenstein 15% Madagascar 15% Malawi 15% Malaysia 19% Mauritius 15% Moldova 25% Mozambique 15% Myanmar (Burma) 40% Namibia 15% Nauru 15% New Zealand 15% Nicaragua 18% Nigeria 15% North Macedonia 15% Norway 15% Pakistan 19% Papua New Guinea 15% Philippines 19% Serbia 35% South Africa 30% South Korea 15% Sri Lanka 20% Switzerland 39% Syria 41% Taiwan 20% Thailand 19% Trinidad and Tobago 15% Tunisia 25% Turkey 15% Uganda 15% United Kingdom 10% Vanuatu 15% Venezuela 15% Vietnam 20% Zambia 15% Zimbabwe 15% [1] For purposes of this Executive Order and its Annexes, 'Column 1 Duty Rate' means the ad valorem (or ad valorem equivalent) rate of duty under column 1-General of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS). Source: White House

Ambassador Gao Wenqi Attends the Working Meeting between Leaders of Export-Import Bank of China and Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning of Rwanda
Ambassador Gao Wenqi Attends the Working Meeting between Leaders of Export-Import Bank of China and Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning of Rwanda

Zawya

timea day ago

  • Zawya

Ambassador Gao Wenqi Attends the Working Meeting between Leaders of Export-Import Bank of China and Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning of Rwanda

AFRICA On July 31, Ambassador Gao Wenqi attended the working meeting betweenYang Dongning, Vice Governor of Export-Import Bank of China and Hon. Yusuf MURANGWA, Minister of Finance and Economic Planning of Rwanda. Both sides exchanged views on promoting the trade, economic and financial cooperation between China and Rwanda. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Embassy of the People's Republic of China in the Republic of Rwanda. Disclaimer: The contents of this press release was provided from an external third party provider. This website is not responsible for, and does not control, such external content. This content is provided on an 'as is' and 'as available' basis and has not been edited in any way. Neither this website nor our affiliates guarantee the accuracy of or endorse the views or opinions expressed in this press release. The press release is provided for informational purposes only. The content does not provide tax, legal or investment advice or opinion regarding the suitability, value or profitability of any particular security, portfolio or investment strategy. Neither this website nor our affiliates shall be liable for any errors or inaccuracies in the content, or for any actions taken by you in reliance thereon. You expressly agree that your use of the information within this article is at your sole risk. To the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, this website, its parent company, its subsidiaries, its affiliates and the respective shareholders, directors, officers, employees, agents, advertisers, content providers and licensors will not be liable (jointly or severally) to you for any direct, indirect, consequential, special, incidental, punitive or exemplary damages, including without limitation, lost profits, lost savings and lost revenues, whether in negligence, tort, contract or any other theory of liability, even if the parties have been advised of the possibility or could have foreseen any such damages. © ZAWYA 2025

AI chip smuggling 'gets more airtime than it should', White House official says
AI chip smuggling 'gets more airtime than it should', White House official says

The National

timea day ago

  • The National

AI chip smuggling 'gets more airtime than it should', White House official says

The idea of high-performance AI chips being smuggled into potentially nefarious hands gets more attention than it should, a White House official has said. Michael Kratsios, who serves as director for the Trump administration's Office of Science and Technology Policy, said on Wednesday that there are a lot of misconceptions and misguided fears about the 'physical diffusion' of artificial intelligence technology developed by the US. 'We're not talking about like a bag of diamonds or something,' he said during a discussion at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies think tank about Mr Trump's recently announced AI Action Plan. Some politicians have expressed concerns about the potential for recently announced US AI partnerships overseas to be exploited by countries like China to try to acquire powerful American-made technology. 'These are like massive racks that are tonnes in weight and you're not going to put it on a forklift or back it into a truck, or something," he explained, adding that the idea of chip smuggling "probably gets more airtime than it should." Mr Kratsios also said the hypothetical scenario of the US partnerships with other countries leading to the misuse of data centres by countries like China for 'training runs' to access the centres was overblown. 'What you're most worried about is large-scale runs that are for training sophisticated models and those are actually pretty easy to flag,' he said, adding that the US will make sure to implement what's known in IT circles as Know Your Customer policies to prevent bad actors from gaining access to data centres powered by US technology. Mr Kratsios said that Mr Trump's predecessor, Joe Biden, put too many chip export restrictions on allies, and that the export of US technology to countries with peaceful AI aspirations was critical to an overall AI strategy. During Mr Trump's visit to the Gulf in May, he announced the US-UAE AI Acceleration Partnership framework that will eventually lead to the construction of a 5GW UAE-US AI Campus in Abu Dhabi. 'The [Biden administration] limits made no sense at all,' he said, referring to President Biden's policies aimed at limiting the powerful CPUs and GPUs available to certain countries. Those policies were largely aimed at preventing the diffusion of US technology to China. It proved controversial, with companies like Microsoft and Nvidia claiming the policies hurt US efforts more than helping. Some US AI companies like Anthropic, however, have sought to keep the export controls. 'In some cases, smugglers have employed creative methods to circumvent export controls, including hiding processors in prosthetic baby bumps and packing GPUs [graphics processing units] alongside live lobsters,' read an April policy letter from Anthropic. That letter later came under criticism over what some called the oversimplification of how AI data centres work. Regardless, in keeping with that theme of reversing the Biden export policy, the Trump White House recently announced plans that would allow for Nvidia to resume sales of its H20 graphics processing unit to China. That decision, however, has come under criticism from several technology analysts and politicians. A group of Democratic senators this week sent a letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick urging him to reverse course. At the CSIS event, Mr Kratsios said the concerns from Democratic senators were oversimplified, adding that the H20 was designed to comply with US concerns about giving China too much computing power, among other things. 'It's not a free-for-all sale,' he said, referring to White House's H20 announcement. 'Any sale that Nvidia wants to make to China is one that's going to require an export licence.' Mr Kratsios added that the Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security would be evaluating each of those licence applications and 'weight the costs' before giving Nvidia approval.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store