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China to See Limited Impact From U.S. Slowdown, World Bank Says Zhang Dingmin China will see only a ``limited'' impact from the slowdown in the U.S., the world's biggest economy, as most goods it sells there are labor-intensive items needed for daily use, said the World Bank's Chief Economist Justin Lin. ``Chinese exports to the U.S. will remain strong and won't see negative growth'' this year and next, Lin told an investment forum in Beijing today. The U.S. is China's biggest trading partner after the E.U. China aims to slow export growth to curb a trade surplus that has helped pump excess cash into its banking system, threatening to overheat the world's fastest-growing major economy. Total U.S. imports plunged the most in six years in March as purchases of furniture, cars and telecommunications gear fell, reflecting the weakest growth since 2001 and a falling dollar.
(Article continues below) Premier Wen Jiabao is balancing efforts to curb inflation near an 11-year high against the risk of an economic slump as overseas demand for Chinese goods weakens. China's export growth slowed to 22 percent in April after gaining 31 percent in March, according to figures derived from Ministry of Commerce data. April's trade surplus was about $16.8 billion, according to Ministry of Commerce data. China must save less and boost consumption to narrow the trade surplus, People's Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan told a forum in Shanghai yesterday. Zhou raised interest rates six times in 2007 and ordered banks to set aside larger reserves this year to curb loan growth that helped fuel inflation.
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