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Understanding China's demand for resource imports

Is China's demand for resources driven predominantly by domestic factors or by global demand for its exports? The answer to this question is of interest given the highly resource-intensive nature of China's growth, and is important for many resource-exporting countries, such as Australia,...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:China economic review 2012-09, Vol.23 (3), p.566-579
Main Authors: Roberts, Ivan, Rush, Anthony
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Is China's demand for resources driven predominantly by domestic factors or by global demand for its exports? The answer to this question is of interest given the highly resource-intensive nature of China's growth, and is important for many resource-exporting countries, such as Australia, Brazil, Canada and India. This paper provides evidence that China's (mainly manufacturing) exports have been a significant driver of its demand for resource commodities over recent decades. First, it employs input–output tables to demonstrate that, historically, manufacturing has been at least as important as construction as a driver of China's demand for resource-intensive metal products. Second, it shows that global trade in non-oil resource commodities can be described by the gravity model of trade. Using this model it is found that, controlling for other determinants of resource trade, exports (and the manufacturing sector more generally) are a sizeable and significant determinant of a country's resource imports, and that this has been true for China as well as for other countries. ► We consider the drivers of Chinese resource demand using input-output tables. ► We estimate a gravity model of global trade in non-oil resource commodities. ► Exports are an important driver of resource imports, in China and other countries.
ISSN:1043-951X
1873-7781
DOI:10.1016/j.chieco.2011.05.004