South Korea’s exports dropped slightly from a year earlier last month, but its trade surplus widened as imports shrank at a faster rate, the government said Monday.
Outbound shipments came to $46.99 billion in November, down 1.9 percent from the same month last year, according to the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy.
Imports dropped 4 percent on-year to some $41.38 billion.
The country posted a trade surplus of about $5.61, compared with a surplus of 4.8 billion in November 2013. It was Korea’s 34th straight monthly trade surplus.
The drop in exports was largely attributed to a cut in the number of working days.
“Overall exports somewhat shrank due to a cut in the number of working days by one from a year earlier, but the growing trend continued as seen in the rise in the daily average amount of exports,” the ministry said in a press release.
The daily average amount of exports came to $2.09 billion last month, compared with $2.04 billion in November 2013, it added.
Exports to the United States jumped 20.8 on-year last month, but shipments to most other major economies shrank significantly.
Shipments to China, the world’s single largest importer of South Korean products, slipped 3.2 percent on-year with shipments to European Union countries shrinking 6.7 percent.
By product, shipments of semiconductors spiked 16.7 percent on-year with exports of steel products also surging 13.3 percent.
Outbound shipments of automobiles dropped 5.5 percent with shipments of petroleum products, such as gasoline, plunging 21.6 percent. (Yonhap)
Outbound shipments came to $46.99 billion in November, down 1.9 percent from the same month last year, according to the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy.
Imports dropped 4 percent on-year to some $41.38 billion.
The country posted a trade surplus of about $5.61, compared with a surplus of 4.8 billion in November 2013. It was Korea’s 34th straight monthly trade surplus.
The drop in exports was largely attributed to a cut in the number of working days.
“Overall exports somewhat shrank due to a cut in the number of working days by one from a year earlier, but the growing trend continued as seen in the rise in the daily average amount of exports,” the ministry said in a press release.
The daily average amount of exports came to $2.09 billion last month, compared with $2.04 billion in November 2013, it added.
Exports to the United States jumped 20.8 on-year last month, but shipments to most other major economies shrank significantly.
Shipments to China, the world’s single largest importer of South Korean products, slipped 3.2 percent on-year with shipments to European Union countries shrinking 6.7 percent.
By product, shipments of semiconductors spiked 16.7 percent on-year with exports of steel products also surging 13.3 percent.
Outbound shipments of automobiles dropped 5.5 percent with shipments of petroleum products, such as gasoline, plunging 21.6 percent. (Yonhap)