Exporting to China: New
Opportunities, New Resources
by Tim Wineland
Office of the Chinese Economic
Area, Market Access and
Compliance
CHINA
CONTACTS
U.S.
Government Resources
U.S. Department of
Commerce
Office of the
Chinese Economic
Area Tel: (202)
482-5527
www.export.gov/china
Trade Information
Center
Tel: (800) USA-TRAD(E)
www.export.gov/tic
Import
Administration
Tel: (202) 482-3415
http://ia.ita.doc.gov/
Trade Compliance
Center
Tel: (202) 482-1191
www.export.gov/tcc
U.S. Commercial
Service in China
www.buyusa.gov/china/en
Office of the U.S.
Trade
Representative,
Office of China,
Hong Kong, and
Taiwan
Tel: (202) 395-3900
U.S. Department of
State, Office of
Chinese and
Mongolian Affairs
Tel: (202) 647-6796
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On February 1, China
celebrated the Chinese New
Year: the Year of the Sheep.
U.S. companies that export to
China also had reasons to
celebrate. In 2002—China’s
first full year as a member of
the World Trade
Organization—U.S. exports to
China increased significantly.
U.S. exports to China in 2002
rose 12 percent in comparison
with the previous year. Since
1990, American exports to
China have more than doubled
to over $21 billion a year.
For U.S. manufacturers, there
are more and more reasons to
consider China a strong
market. The dynamic and
growing Chinese population,
combined with the market
access secured by China’s
WTO membership, is creating
many opportunities for U.S.
exporters. China is not just a
market for the largest
multinationals. In fact, 83
percent of all U.S. firms
exporting to China in 1999
(the last period for which
data are available) were small
and medium-sized enterprises,
and 46 percent were very small
companies—each with fewer
than 20 employees. As U.S.
companies increasingly focus
on China, the Commerce
Department is strengthening
its export services.
While the global economy grew
less than 2 percent last year,
the Chinese economy grew 8
percent, according to Chinese
data. Since China’s opening
in 1979, gross domestic
product growth has averaged 9
percent a year. Additionally,
China has charted the fastest
economic growth of any major
economy since 1990.
While much of this growth is
attributed to Chinese
government spending and
foreign direct investment,
consumer demand in China is
beginning to play a larger
role in driving the economy.
More cellular phones are in
use in China than in any other
country in the world. China is
the second-largest personal
computer market in Asia after
Japan, and sales of PCs have
risen at an annual average of
67 percent since 1993.
Consumer purchases of
automobiles have begun to take
off. Motor vehicle demand in
China is expected to grow from
around 2 million units today
to 10 million units within a
decade.
China
in the WTO: A First-Year
Report Card
Concurrent with the rise in
consumer demand, China’s WTO
accession has created new
opportunities for U.S.
exporters. One example is the
automotive sector. Substantial
tariff reductions last year
prompted a price war and a
34-percent jump in auto sales.
In turn, U.S. auto parts
exports increased more than 60
percent in the first three
quarters of 2002, in
comparison with the previous
year.
As a new WTO member, China has
begun to lower tariffs, create
a more transparent investment
environment, overhaul and
publish its laws and
regulations, strengthen
intellectual property laws,
and restructure standards and
testing procedures. But many
of these reforms are being
phased in over several years,
and many tasks remain undone.
Market barriers remain, and
China still faces challenges
in such areas as enforcing
intellectual property rights,
further improving transparency
and the rule of law, and
ensuring that product
standards are in line with
international norms and are
applied equally to domestic
and imported goods.
The U.S. Department of
Commerce closely monitors
China’s WTO implementation.
Even before China’s
accession to the WTO, the
department’s International
Trade Administration (ITA)
offered exporters pursuing the
Chinese market an array of
trade tools and services.
However, since the WTO
accession of China in December
2001, the ITA has established
several new resources for
businesses interested in
China.
China Team Outreach
Since
December 2001, representatives
from the ITA China Team in
Washington, D.C., have
traveled across the United
States to meet with small
companies, chambers of
commerce, industry
associations, and other groups
at 19 events. The objective of
these outreach activities has
been to promote understanding
of what China’s WTO
membership means for U.S.
businesses, as well as to
share information on the many
services that the Commerce
Department offers exporters.
In New York City, Omaha,
Minneapolis, and Los Angeles,
among others, ITA China
specialists have participated
in conferences, workshops, and
briefings prior to trade
missions for exporters
interested in China.
Trade Facilitation
Office in Beijing
In China, the ITA has
expanded its staff and
increased its focus on the WTO
by inaugurating a Trade
Facilitation Office (TFO) at
the U.S. embassy in Beijing.
TFO team members work closely
with American businesses,
Commerce Department trade and
WTO specialists in Washington,
and embassy staffers to ensure
that U.S. companies enjoy the
benefits of China’s WTO
accession.
The Trade Facilitation
Office’s mission is
manifold. The TFO conducts
outreach activities, working
closely with the American
business community in China to
identify real and potential
market access problems and
issues as China implements its
WTO obligations. The
Facilitation Office also
provides information to U.S.
companies on what China’s
WTO accession means for their
operations in China or exports
to China. TFO staff also
advocate on behalf of U.S.
exporters to ensure that broad
WTO compliance issues and
specific WTO-related problems
U.S. industries encounter in
China are raised with Chinese
authorities.
Additionally, the office
organizes seminars in China on
WTO-related issues for Chinese
officials, as well as programs
to familiarize Chinese
businesses with international
commercial practices and
standards. The Trade
Facilitation team also
provides feedback to
U.S.-based Commerce Department
staff to share with American
companies.
This is but a summary of
Department of Commerce plans
to ensure that the benefits of
China’s WTO accession reach
every American exporter with
an interest in China. The
entire array of Commerce
Department tools for U.S.
firms exporting to China is
available at www.export.gov/china.
We invite you to visit
other MDEC articles on China:
China
WebGuide - our unique
series of selected
hyperlinks specific to
China.
Hong
Kong - the Paper Tiger
Lives
-Hong Kong, one of the
so-called Asian tigers of
the 1990s, may have lost a
step or two during the
current slowdown, but no
snaggle-toothed feline is
this.
Marketing
in China: Opportunities
and Challenges -
The opportunities present
in the China market are
real; as real as the
challenges the market
presents to American
companies looking to grow
sales.
Opportunities
From China's Accession to
the WTO - This article
explores Michigan's
traditional products and
current business
opportunities in China.
Turley's
Tips - Written by US
Senior Commercial Officer,
Alan Turley, this handy
series of tips will help
assure your success in
this difficult market.
Date Updated: March 27, 2007
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