Imports too declined by 0.75 per cent USD 41.14 billion, leaving a trade deficit of USD 15.17 billion during the month under review
Chinese data early in the year is often heavily distorted by the timing of the Long Lunar New Year holidays, which fall in either January or February
The country's exports grew marginally by 0.34 per cent to USD 27.93 billion in December 2018 on account of negative growth in sectors such as engineering and gems & jewellery, according to a commerce ministry data. Imports, however, dipped by 2.44 per cent to USD 41 billion during the last month, narrowing the trade deficit to USD 13 billion. The trade deficit stood at USD 14.2 billion in December 2017. Gold imports declined by 24.33 per cent to USD 2.56 billion in December last year as against USD 3.39 billion in the same month of 2017. During April-December this fiscal, exports grew by 10.18 per cent to USD 245.44 billion. Imports rose by 12.61 per cent to USD 386.65 billion. The trade deficit widened to USD 141.2 billion during the nine months of the current fiscal from USD 120.57 billion in April-December 2017-18. Oil imports in December 2018 rose by 3.16 per cent to USD 10.67 billion.
Imports during the month also rose by 17.62 per cent to USD 44.11 billion
Imports grew by 25.41 per cent in August to $45.24 billion due to costlier crude oil shipments.
Merchandise exports grew 9.6% to $23.5 bn in October, while imports expanded 8.1% to $33.67 bn