The Korea Herald

지나쌤

April’s trade volume shrinks for second straight month

By Korea Herald

Published : May 1, 2012 - 19:35

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South Korea’s trade volume for April shrank from a year earlier for the second straight month, mainly due to a drop in overseas delivery of ships and semiconductors and weak local demand for commodities, a government report showed Tuesday.

Despite the contraction in trade volume, the country’s trade balance remained in the black for the third straight month to the tune of $2.15 billion, according to the report by the Ministry of Knowledge Economy.

The country’s exports reached $46.26 billion in April, down 4.7 percent on-year, with imports dipping 0.2 percent to $44.11 billion, the monthly report said.

Last month’s positive trade balance is smaller than the $2.44 billion surplus tallied for March, when the country shipped out $47.38 billion worth of goods and imported $44.93 billion.

March marked the first time since October 2009 that the country’s exports and imports contracted simultaneously from a year earlier.

The ministry in charge of the country’s industrial policies and trade promotion said weak demand for ships, semiconductors and petrochemicals, along with a slight reduction in working days contributed to the negative growth in April.

Exports of ships nosedived 21.7 percent on-year, with semiconductors and petrochemicals falling 8.3 percent and 4.9 percent, respectively.

Overseas shipment of wireless telecommunication products contracted 37.1 percent.

It added that because people took a full day off for the parliamentary elections, the total number of working days fell from a year earlier.

On imports, the report showed local companies cutting back on purchasing various commodities such as steel products and consumer goods.

Imports of crude oil and natural gas, however, increased 5.3 percent and 43.6 percent, respectively, vis-a-vis April 2011.

The latest report showed exports to the Middle East and the Commonwealth of Independent States jumped 34.9 percent and 24.5 percent on-year, respectively, with gains of 5.6 percent for the United States and 4.0 percent for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations.

Outbound shipments to China, South Korea No.1 overseas market, were up 1.7 percent, while numbers contracted for Japan and the European Union.

The ministry said in the first four months of this year, South Korea’s exports reached $181.19 billion, for a gain of 0.9 percent from a year earlier, while imports increased 5.5 percent to $177.37 billion for a combined trade surplus of around $3.8 billion. 

(Yonhap News)