BEIJING — China’s service trade maintained robust growth in the first five months of this year as the government has channeled more energy into opening the service sector.
The Ministry of Commerce (MOC) said the country’s service trade rose 12 percent year-on-year to stand at 2.1 trillion yuan (nearly $320 billion) in the January-May period on July 5.
Service exports increased 13.3 percent to 691.53 billion yuan, while imports gained 11.4 percent to 1.41 trillion yuan, resulting in a deficit of nearly 720 billion yuan.
Trade in services refers to the sale and delivery of intangible products such as transportation, tourism, telecommunications, construction, advertising, computing and accounting.
The MOC said the growth rates hit new highs this year and outpaced the expansion of goods trade during the same time. China’s service trade accounted for 15.3 percent of the total foreign trade in the first five months, up 0.7 percentage point from a year ago.
China has taken steps to improve the development of trade in services, including gradually opening up the finance, education, culture and medical treatment sectors.
Seventeen regions, including Beijing, started to deepen a pilot program from July 1 this year to June 30, 2020 to promote innovative development of service trade. The program was first rolled out by the State Council in 2016.
A series of new opening-up measures were piloted in the regions, covering telecommunications, tourism, engineering consulting, finance and legal services.