Australia’s Shrinking China Trade Surplus Signals Economic Warning

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Australia’s trade surplus with China shrank to its lowest since 2018 in 2025, driven by a 2% drop in exports like iron ore and coal for the second straight year. China’s weak imports and surging cheap exports are reshaping global trade flows.​

Trade Data Breakdown

Exports to China fell amid Beijing’s economic slowdown, while Australian imports of Chinese EVs (e.g., BYD), e-commerce goods from Temu and Shein surged. Overall goods trade surplus narrowed to AUD 2.94 billion in November 2025, below forecasts.

Broader Implications

The trend drags on major exporters like Australia, highlighting China’s export dominance despite domestic weakness. Iron ore, coal shipments declined in value, pressuring commodity-reliant economies.​

Maritime Trade Context

Shipping routes face adjustments with reduced bulk carrier demand from Australia to China, potential vessel diversions, and rising container imports. Impacts ripple to Asia-Pacific ports handling transshipments.

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