China Announces Record Trade Surplus as Its Exports Flood World’s Markets

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China’s surplus reached $1.19 trillion, a 20 percent increase from 2024, according to data released by the country’s General Administration of Customs.

Two people in blue hard hats handle a gray car body panel in an industrial factory. Yellow machinery is seen in the background.
The production line at a car factory in Hangzhou, China, in October. Exports to the United States fell but rose to much of the rest of the world. Credit...Chang W. Lee/The New York Times

Keith Bradsher

Jan. 13, 2026Updated 10:35 p.m. ET

China announced on Wednesday the world’s largest trade surplus ever, even adjusting for inflation, as a tsunami of exports flooded markets around the world last year.

China’s surplus, the value of goods and services it sold abroad versus its imports, reached $1.19 trillion, an increase of 20 percent from 2024, according to data released by the country’s General Administration of Customs. The number had already exceeded $1 trillion through November.

The country’s surplus is still widening: for December alone, China’s surplus reached $114.14 billion. It was the third-highest monthly surplus on record, trailing only January and June last year.

The enormous trade surplus for the full year came despite efforts by President Trump to use tariffs to contain China’s factories. The tariffs reduced China’s trade surplus with the United States. But Chinese factories increased sales to other regions, in many cases bypassing U.S. tariffs by shipping goods to the United States through Southeast Asia and elsewhere.

Also driving up China’s surplus in trade was the country’s chronic weakness in imports. Beijing’s leaders have pursued an ambitious industrial policy to replace imports with domestic production. Their goal has been to build national self-reliance in many industrial sectors.

China reaffirmed its self-reliance goals in October when it unveiled an initial sketch of its five-year plan for the economy through 2030.


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