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China hides North Korea trade in statistics

Mon Oct 26, 2009 11:40am IST
 
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By Chris Buckley

BEIJING (Reuters) - China has stopped publicly issuing trade data about North Korea, veiling the potentially sensitive numbers about its wary neighbour under another category while the two countries seek improved ties.

Destination and origin statistics on China's imports and exports for September issued on Monday gave no separate numbers for second straight month for the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, the formal name of the North, as they have long appeared in the tables.

The trade tables for coal, crude oil, oil products and cereals issued by China's General Administration of Customs instead used another category, "other Asia not elsewhere specified", which for those commodities at least appeared to cover exclusively trade flows between China and the North.

Analysts and officials have used Chinese statistics to gauge otherwise opaque ties between the two communist neighbours. But North Korea has stopped appearing in the Chinese data since last month, when statistics for August also avoided mention of it.

The change may help Beijing to obscure shifts in economic flows with the North, which relies on China for most of its trade and aid. In the build-up to North Korea's first nuclear test in Oct. 2006, the trade data showed China cut crude oil shipments to the North in September, although it was unclear whether the stoppage was a calculated gesture or due to more prosaic problems.

An official in charge of data services at the Customs Administration told Reuters that the change would last, but would not say why. Reuters and other companies buy the data.

"We're no longer issuing trade data about North Korea," said the official, who declined to give her name. "We're not allowed to issue the data anymore."

She declined to answer further questions, referring them to another data services official.   Continued...

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