Showing posts with label communities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label communities. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Trade in Austarlai

Australia reported a trade deficit equivalent to 285 Million AUD in May of 2012. Historically, from 1971 until 2012, Australia Balance of Trade averaged -369.3 Million AUD reaching an all time high of 3478.0 Million AUD in June of 2010 and a record low of -3651.0 Million AUD in February of 2008. Rich in natural resources, Australia is a major exporter of agricultural products, particularly wheat and wool, minerals such as iron-ore and gold, and energy in the form of liquefied natural gas and coal. Australia is a major importer of machinery and transport equipment, computers and office machines and telecommunication lasers. Its main trading partners are: Japan, China, The United States and New Zealand. This page includes a chart with chronological data for Australia Balance of Trade.
The balance of trade is the difference between the monetary value of exports and imports in an economy over a certain period of time. A helpful balance of trade is known as a trade surplus and consists of exporting more than is imported; a negative balance of trade is known as a trade deficit or, unceremoniously, a trade gap. The balance of trade forms part of the current account, which also includes other transactions such as income from the international investment position as well as international aid. If the current account is in surplus, the country's net international asset position increases correspondingly. Equally, a deficit decreases the net international asset position. The Balance of Trade is matching to the difference between a country's output and its domestic demand - the difference between what goods a country produces and how many goods it buys from abroad; this does not include money respent on foreign stocks, nor does it factor the concept of importing goods to produce for the domestic market.
The Australian Trade Commission (Austrade) assists Australian businesses to expand their business outside Australia with information about export markets, grants and assistance and promotes and supports productive foreign venture and international education in Australia.
The principal roles of the Australian Customs and Border Protection Service are to facilitate trade and the movement of people across the Australian border while protecting the community and maintaining appropriate obedience with Australian law; to efficiently collect customs revenue; and to administer specific industry assistance schemes and trade measures.
DECO is responsible for administering controls on the export of defence and dual-use goods, and the granting of authorisations to export, in the form of permits and licenses. Items subject to control are listed within the Defence and Strategic Goods List (DSGL). The dual-use categories include Chemicals, Toxins, Materials Processing, Electronics, Computers, Telecommunications and Information Security, Sensors and Lasers, Navigation and Avionics, Marine and Aerospace and momentum sectors. 
Your gateway to Australian Financial Services licensing and regulation. The Financial Services Gateway is an online portal to help international visitors understand Australia's regulatory environment, guiding probable investors to banking, superannuation, insurance and funds administration information.

Trade in Austarlai

Australia and New Zealand's biggest annual celebration of all things fair trade is coming soon. With events, activities and promotions happening across both countries, Fair Trade Fortnight gives each of us the opening to celebrate the life-changing difference our fair trade choice makes for millions of developing country farmers, producers, their families and communities.  
The first one that was sent out just wouldn't start. Called up the company, they agreed to replace it but would not pay for postage of returning it.
The second one they sent out had a broken fuel tank cover which wouldn't stay on.

Called up the company, the sales rep. told us that it wasn't such a big deal, but as a favour to us, he would be willing to exchange for another chainsaw.

We refused and asked for a refund, but the group would only agree to refund of 80% of cost of the chainsaw, as they didn't think a broken fuel cap was an issue.

They also refused to refund any postage costs that were incurred, despite the products they had sent out being faulty. 
Australia has always been a trading nation. Its political, colonization and cultural links with other countries have been reinforced by trade and investment, with its high reliance on imports such as electrical appliances, cars, clothes, footwear, PCs and watches being a reminder of these trade links. The influx of imported products has benefited Australia but in recent decades, the reliance on them has caused problems for its economy. Such problems have incorporated trade deficits, whereby the value of imports has exceeded that of exports by between $12 and $20 billion each year. They also include foreign debt in money owed overseas, which has increased from roughly $19 billion to $527 billion since the 1980s, as well as causing unemployment. Australia's current trade and trade and industry policies, particularly its push for stronger trading links with Asia-Pacific countries, reflect the attempt at tackling these ongoing problems.
Although Australia relies heavily on its overseas foreign outlay and employers, with hundreds of foreign companies operating in Australia, it is also a high exporter of goods, services and capital, with 60% of its exports going to the Asia-Pacific region. Agricultural goods and minerals dominate Australia's exports, as do some of its service firms such as Qantas which is well known overseas, especially in its region. This chapter will explore Australia's trade links in its membership with regional trading blocs and agreements, and its shift away from its traditional trading partners such as Britain, and the types of goods exported.

Trade in Austarlai

For many years, Britain was Australia's major trading partner, with its acquire of Australian farm products and supplies to Australia of consumer goods. Britain's trade with Australia has declined since the 1960s, so that it now ranks sixth behind Australia's top five trading partners. Australia still exports primary products such as minerals, wheat and fruit to Britain and other western European countries despite the decline in trade. However, Japan has develop into Australia's largest trading partner with its importing of Australian wool, and minerals such as coal and iron ore. Other regional Asian countries have become major importers of Australia's primary products, especially wheat. Japan and also the United States have replaced Britain as Australia's main source of consumer goods. As well as supplying food, raw materials and insincere goods, Australia currently provides services such as education, training and software development to its Asia-Pacific neighbours.
Australia belongs to the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) group (1989). APEC began in response to the growing interdependence of Asia-Pacific economies, and has 18 member nations located around the Asia-Pacific Rim that includes Brunei, Canada, Chile, China, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Philippines, Russia, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, United States and Vietnam. The significance of APEC can be seen in its member countries' increase in exports, valued at approximately US$2.5 trillion and representing about 43% of total world exports, as well as imports, valued at approximately US$2.4 trillion and representing about 44% of total world imports in topical years. More than half of Australia's exports go to APEC countries and about 40 percent of imports and much of its foreign investment come from these. Australia seeks from APEC the promotion of free trade in the region and other countries, to protect and project regional interests in wider negotiations such as the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) negotiations and to develop cooperative projects in improving the economic routine of member countries and the region in general.
  Australia's first trading agreement in its region was the New Zealand-Australia Free Trade Agreement (1965), which was a response to Britain's move away from trade in the British Commonwealth to join the European Economic Community (ECC). This was followed by a call for closer trade and industry ties and the signing of the Australia-New Zealand Closer Economic Relations Trade Agreement (CER) in 1983. In 1988 the two countries agreed to implement free trade in goods from 1990 and discussions are ongoing for increased harmonisation of competition policy, banking and accountancy regulations, as well as mutual links in migration, tourism, transport, and the relaxing of export subsidies between the countries. Points of friction remain on issues such as Australia's strict quarantine laws. CER is recognised as one of the world's most successful free trade agreements.
A high level of foreign investment into Australia has allowed faster advance of its domestic resources. In 2003, foreign investment into Australia reached $904.4 billion, up by $47.4 billion or 5.5 percent on the previous year, with direct investment rising 8.4 percent to $233.5 billion. Australia's government has a regional headquarters program aimed at encouraging global companies to establish regional bases in Australia by stressing its economic strengths, cultural diversity and stability. It has further used this to promote its image as a gateway to the Asia-Pacific with strong trade and cultural links with countries in this region. In the late 1990s, Australia's unique stability and economic strength was shown by its remaining relatively unscathed by the Asian Financial Crisis, which was caused by a boom of international lending to the region followed by a sudden withdrawal of funds. Many Australian companies retained a presence in countries hit by the crisis such as Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia. Australia has since benefited from honouring its district trade links now that conditions have improved. Further, its ability to adapt to such crises has now been seen by many overseas investors to be proven. Such investors with a regional base in Australia include American firms, Dow Chemical, Hewlett Packard and Microsoft, the Finnish firm, Nokia, and German firm, Siemens.
Another major Asia-Pacific trading bloc is the connection of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) Free Trade Area (AFTA). Australia's exports to AFTA countries exceed exports to either the European Union or North America. Its member countries include Burma, Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam. AFTA's future goals coincide with Australia's regional trading aims. These goals include liberalising trade in ASEAN by progressively removing tariff and non-tariff barriers, attracting foreign investors, and adapting ASEAN to the rise of other district trading blocs.
The law in most countries requires that a signature on a document be witnessed or other procedures applied before the document can be used for legal purposes or in a court of law. Solicitors, justices of the peace, and notaries public normally perform these functions in Australia, but the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT) may also be authorised to do so. 

Trade in Austarlai

DFAT provides notarial army, or the legalisation of documents, to Australians, or people planning to use documents in Australia, through its State/Territory offices in Australia and its diplomatic missions overseas.

Following over a decade of uninterrupted growth, the Australian economy is now feeling the effects of the pressures of the global economic crisis and is in a period of minimal or zero growth. While consumer demand has been strong and the housing sector robust, the real story regarding growth in GDP forecast for 2009 is .05%, A mild recovery in fiscal growth, to 1.2% may arrive in 2010 but could be as late as 2011. 
The unemployment rate for 2008 was estimated at 4.2 per cent and is forecast to rise to 5 per cent by the June quarter 2009 and 5¾ per cent by the June quarter 2010.
The Reserve Bank of Australia will continue to cut interest rates in the first quarter of 2009, despite the fact that inflation is calculate to remain well above the bank’s target. Headline consumer inflation accelerated to 5% year on year in the third quarter of 2008, up from 4.5% in the previous quarter. The forecast is that inflation will ease to 3.1% in 2009 and 2.6% in 2010. 
Imports of goods rose by AUD$5.6 billion in the third quarter of 2008, to AUD$59.8 billion. Imports of consumer goods fell, in a reflection of the deteriorating outlook for consumer confidence in Australia.
The general tariff reduction on industrialized goods has now fallen to 5 per cent. Duties on passenger motor vehicles (PMV) and parts components has been reduced from 10% (General rate of customs duty) to 5% on 1 January 2010. Duties on textile, clothing and footwear (TCF) have fallen to 10% since 1 January 2005 & will be the same rate as other manufactured goods - 5% in 2015.Pharmaceuticals
Trade in prescription and non-prescription pharmaceuticals between Australia and Canada have been enhanced through a Mutual Recognition Agreement (MRA) signed in March 2005. This agreement allows manufacturers batch certifications to be recognised by one without re-analysis by the other. In addition, the agreement reduces compliance costs and shortens delays in the marketing of Canadian curative/drug products in Australia and vice versa.   
The High Commission in Canberra is primarily involved in market access issues and the development of industrial, economic and systematic cooperation with Australia. It facilitates strategic alliances and investment. It also handles business development and trade enquiries in the following sectors: government and defense procurement; aerospace; agriculture, food and beverages; fish and seafood products, agricultural technology and equipment; education; forest industries; metals, minerals and related equipment, services and technology; and science and technology, and is responsible for business progress in New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu and the Solomon Islands. Canberra co-operates with the Consulate General of Canada in Sydney and the Consulate and Trade Office of Canada in Auckland.
We serve Canadian clients in all sectors. Based on our knowledge of the market, the following sectors offer the greatest opportunities for Canadian companies:
Aerospace & Defence | Agricultural Technology & Equipment | Agriculture, Food & Beverages | Environment and Renewable Energies | Fish & Seafood Products | Forest Industries| Information and connections Technology (ICT) | Life Sciences | Metals, Minerals & Related Equipment, Services & Technology | Service Industries and Capital Projects (including road and rail network and Transportation)

Trade in Austarlai


Friday, June 29, 2012

Trade in china

China is the single most imperative challenge for EU trade policy. China has re-emerged as the world's second largest economy and the biggest exporter in the global wealth, but also an increasingly important political power. EU-China trade has augmented dramatically in recent years. China is now the EU's 2nd trading partner behind the USA and the EU's chief source of imports by far. The EU is also China's biggest trading partner.
The EU's open market has been a large contributor to China's export-led growth. The EU has also benefited from the development of the Chinese market and the EU is committed to open trading relations with China. However the EU wants to make certain that China trades fairly, respects intellectual assets rights and meet its WTO obligations.
Agricultural products were distributed in three major ways in China during the 1980s. They were either retained by the household (now the primary production unit) for allocation among its members, procured by the state, or sold in rural or urban free markets.
Approximately 63 percent of the populace was located in rural areas, where the majority of the people worked in agriculture and rural industries. Under the accountability system for agriculture instituted in 1981, the household replaced the production team as the basic production unit. Families contracted with the fiscal collective to farm a plot of land, delivered a set amount of grain or other produce and the farming tax to the state, and paid a fee to the collective. After meeting these obligations, the household was free to retain its surplus produce or sell it in free markets. Restrictions on private plots and household sideline production were lifted, and much of the making from these was also sold on free markets.
Once food was procured and transported to town areas, it was sold to consumers by state-owned stores and restaurants. In the mid-1980s food items were also accessible in free markets, where peasants sold their produce, and in privately owned restaurants. As noted previously, the prices of pigs, aquatic products, and vegetables were resolute by local authorities according to quality and demand; prices of other products floated freely on the market. Except for grain, edible oil, and a few other rationed items, food items were in good supply.
Industrial goods used in agricultural making were sold to agricultural units in the 1980s. Local cooperatives or state supply and marketing bureaus sold most farming producer goods, including chemical fertilizers and insecticides, to households at set prices. The state also offered preferential prices for agricultural inputs to grain farmers to encourage grain production. Households were permitted to purchase agricultural machines and vehicles to transport goods to market. In order to ensure that rural units could cover the costs of the increasing quantities of engineering inputs required for higher yields, the government periodically reduced the prices of the industrial goods sold to farmers, while raising the procurement prices for agricultural products. In the mid-1980s, however, the price gap between agricultural and industrial products was widening to the weakness of farmers.
Distribution of food and other agricultural goods to town consumers, industry, and rural areas deficient in food was carried out primarily by the state and secondarily by producers or cooperatives. The state procured agricultural goods by means of taxes in kind and by purchases by state commercial departments (state trading companies) under the Ministry of Commerce. The agricultural tax was not large, falling from 12 percent of the total value of agricultural output in 1952 to 5 percent in 1979. In 1984 the number of agricultural and sideline foodstuffs subject to state planning and purchasing quotas was reduced from twenty-nine to ten and included cereal grains, edible oil, cured tobacco, jute, hemp, and pigs. In 1985 the system of state purchasing quotas for agricultural products was abolished. Instead, the state purchased grain and cotton under bond at a set price. Once contracted quotas were met, the grain and cotton were sold on the market at floating prices. If market prices fell below the listed state price, the state purchased all available market grain at the state price to protect the welfare of producers. Vegetables, pigs, and aquatic products sold to urban, mining, and industrial areas were traded in local markets according to demand. Local commercial departments set the prices of these goods according to quality to protect the interests of urban patrons. All other agricultural goods were sold on the market to the state, to cooperatives, or to other producers. Restrictions on private business activities were greatly reduced, permitting peasants as well as cooperatives to transport agricultural goods to rural and town markets and allowing a rapid expansion of free markets in the countryside and in cities. The number of wholesale produce markets increased by 450 percent between 1983 and 1986, reaching a total of 1,100 and easing pressure on the state produce distribution network, which had been strained by the burgeoning agricultural production engendered by pastoral reforms. In 1986 free markets, called "commodity fairs," numbered 61,000 nationwide. 
Trade in china


After 1982, reforms moved China's market to a mixed system based on mandatory planning, guidance planning (use of economic levers such as taxes, prices, and credit instead of administrative fiat), and the free market. In late 1984 further reforms of the urban industrial economy and commerce reduced the scope of mandatory development, increased enterprise autonomy and the authority of professional managers, loosened price controls to rationalize prices, and cut subsidies to enterprises. These changes created a "socialist planned commodity economy," essentially a dual economy in which planned allocation and distribution are supplemented by market exchanges based on on the edge or free prices.
As a result of these reforms, the distribution of goods used in trade production was based on mandatory planning with fixed prices, guidance planning with hovering prices, and the free market. Mandatory planning covered sixty industrial products, including coal, crude oil, rolled steel, nonferrous metals, timber, cement, electricity, basic trade chemicals, chemical fertilizers, major machines and electrical equipment, chemical fibers, newsprint, cigarettes, and defense industry products. Once enterprises under compulsory planning had met the state's mandatory plans and supply contracts, they could sell surplus production to commercial departments or other enterprises. Prices of surplus business producer goods floated within restrictions set by the state. The state also had a planned distribution system for imperative materials such as coal, iron and steel, timber, and cement. Enterprise managers who chose to exceed planned production goals purchased additional materials on the market. Major cities well-known wholesale markets for industrial producer goods to supplement the state's allocation organization.
Under guidance planning, enterprises try to meet the state's planned goals but make their own arrangements for production and sales based on the orientation of the state's plans, the availability of raw and unfinished materials and energy supplies, and the demands on the market. Prices of products under guidance planning either are unified prices or floating prices set by the state or prices negotiated between buyers and suppliers. Production and distribution of products not included in the state's plans are in time by market conditions.
Retail sales in China changed dramatically in the late 1970s and early 1980s as economic reforms increased the supply of food items and consumer goods, allowed state retail stores the freedom to purchase goods on their own, and permitted individuals and collectives greater freedom to engage in retail, service, and catering trades in rural and urban areas. Retail sales increased 300 percent from 1977 to 1985, rising at an average yearly rate of 13.9 percent — 10.5 percent when adjusted for rise. In the 1980s retail sales to rural areas increased at an annual rate of 15.6 percent, outpacing the 9.7 percent increase in retail sales to urban areas and reflecting the more rapid rise in rural incomes. In 1977 sales to rural areas comprised 52 percent of total retail sales; in 1984 rural sales accounted for 59.2 percent of the total. Consumer goods comprised approximately 88 percent of retail sales in 1985, the remaining 12 percent consisting of farming materials and equipment.
The number of retail sales enterprises also expanded rapidly in the 1980s. In 1985 there were 10.7 million retail, catering, and service establishments, a rise of 850 percent over 1976. Most remarkable in the expansion of retail sales was the rapid rise of collective and individually owned retail establishments. Individuals engaged in businesses numbered 12.2 million in 1985, more than 40 times the 1976 figure. Furthermore, as state-owned businesses either were leased or turned over to collective rights or were leased to individuals, the share of state-owned commerce in total retail sales dropped from 90.3 percent in 1976 to 40.5 percent in 1985.
In 1987 most urban retail and service establishments, including state, collective, and private businesses or vendors, were located either in major downtown commercial districts or in small neighborhood shopping areas. The region shopping areas were numerous and were situated so that at least one was within easy walking distance of almost every household. They were able to supply nearly all the daily needs of their customers. A typical neighborhood shopping area in Beijing would contain a one-story department store, bookstore, hardware store, bicycle repair shop, combined tea shop and bakery, restaurant, theater, laundry, bank, post office, barbershop, photography studio, and electrical appliance repair shop. The division stores had small pharmacies and carried a substantial range of housewares, appliances, bicycles, toys, sporting goods, fabrics, and clothing. Major shopping districts in big cities contained larger versions of the neighborhood stores as well as numerous specialty shops, selling such items as musical instruments, sporting goods, hats, stationery, handicrafts, cameras, and clocks.
Supplementing these retail establishments were free markets in which private and collective businesses provided services, hawked wares, or sold food and drinks. Peasants from surrounding rural areas marketed their spare produce or sideline production in these markets. In the 1980s urban areas also saw a revival of "night markets," free markets that operated in the evening and offered extended service hours that more formal establishments could not match.

Trade in china

In rural areas, supply and promotion cooperatives operated general stores and small shopping complexes near village and township administrative headquarters. These businesses were supplemented by collective and entity businesses and by the free markets that appeared across the countryside in the 1980s as a result of rural reforms. Generally speaking, a smaller variety of consumer goods was available in the countryside than in the cities. But the lack was partially offset by the increased access of some peasants to urban areas where they could purchase consumer goods and market farming items.
A number of important consumer goods, including grain, cotton cloth, meat, eggs, edible oil, sugar, and bicycles, were rationed during the 1960s and 1970s. To purchase these items, workers had to use coupons they received from their work units. By the mid-1980s rationing of over seventy items had been eliminated; production of buyer goods had increased, and most items were in good supply. Grain, edible oil, and a few other items still required coupons. In 1985 pork rationing was reinstated in twenty-one cities as supplies ran low. Pork was available at higher prices in supermarkets and free markets.
he pragmatic modernization drive led by party leaders Zhou Enlai and Deng Xiaoping and China's growing contacts with Western nations resulted in a sharp acceleration of trade in the early 1970s. Imports of modern plants and equipment were mainly emphasized, and after 1973 oil became an increasingly important export. Trade more than doubled between 1970 and 1975, reaching US$13.9 billion. Growth in this period was about 9 percent a year. As a proportion of GNP, trade grew from 1.7 percent in 1970 to 3.9 percent in 1975. In 1976 the feeling of uncertainty resulting from the death of Mao Zedong and pressure from the Gang of Four, whose members opposed reliance on foreign technology, brought another decline in trade.
Beginning in the late 1970s, China reversed the Maoist monetary development strategy and, by the early 1980s, had committed itself to a policy of being more open to the outside world and widening foreign economic relations and trade. The opening up policy led to the reorganization and decentralization of foreign trade institutions, the adoption of a legal framework to facilitate foreign economic relations and trade, direct foreign investment, the creation of special economic zones, the rapid expansion of foreign trade, the importation of foreign technology and management methods, taking part in international financial markets, and participation in international foreign economic organizations. These changes not only benefited the Chinese economy but also integrated China into the world economy. In 1979 Chinese trade totaled US$27.7 billion - 6 percent of China's GNP but only 0.7 percent of total world trade. In 1985 Chinese strange trade rose to US$70.8 billion, representing 20 percent of China's GNP and 2 percent of total world trade and putting China sixteenth in world trade rankings.
 he EU-China High Level Economic and Trade Dialogue was launched in Beijing in April 2008. The HED strengthens the dialogue between the European Commission and the State Council of China, at Vice-Premier level. It deals with issues of strategic importance to EU-China trade and economic relations and provides impetus to progress concretely in sectoral dialogues. This dialogue provides a tool to address issues of mutual concern in the areas of investment, market access and intellectual property rights protection, as well as other issues related to trade. The third meeting of the HED was held in Beijing on 20-21 December 2010.
 The EU was a strong supporter of China's accession to the WTO, arguing that a WTO without China was not truly universal in scope. For China, formal succession to the WTO in December 2001 symbolised an important step of its integration into the universal economic order. The commitments made by China in the context of accession to the WTO secured improved access for EU firms to China's market. Import tariffs and other non-tariff barriers were sharply and permanently reduced. However, while China has made good progress in implementing its WTO commitments, there are still outstanding problems. China's compliance with the commitments it undertook when joining the WTO were periodically reviewed in a process called the Transitional Review Mechanism. This process ended 10 years after accession, in December 2011. The EU also uses the regular bi-annual Trade Policy Review of China in the WTO to raise a number of concerns regarding China's trade policy. These include inadequate protection of academic property rights, the maintenance of industrial policies and non-tariff measures which may discriminate against foreign companies and barriers to market access in a number of services sectors including construction, banking, insurance, telecommunications, and postal services). Export restrictions on raw materials have also been identified as a major trade obstacle.
In 2006 the European Commission adopted a major policy strategy (Partnership and Competition) on China that pledged the EU to accepting tough Chinese competition while pushing China to trade fairly. Part of this strategy is the ongoing conference on a comprehensive Partnership and Cooperation Agreement (PCA) that started in January 2007. These discussions aim to further improve the framework for bilateral trade and outlay relations and also include the upgrading of the 1985 EC-China Trade and Economic Cooperation Agreement. However, positions remain far apart on many important chapters, and the European payment has called upon China to make obvious more ambition.
China reported a buy and sell surplus equivalent to 31.7 Billion USD in June of 2012. Historically, from 1986 until 2012, China Balance of Trade averaged 6.0300 Billion USD reaching an all time high of 40.0900 Billion USD in November of 2008 and a record low of -66.0000 Billion USD in December of 1989. Export growth has continued to be a major component supporting China's rapid economic growth. Exports of goods and services constitute 39.7% of GDP. China major exports are: office machines & data processing equipment, telecommunications equipment, electrical machinery and apparel & clothing. China imports mainly commodities: iron and steel, oil and mineral fuels; machinery and equipment, plastics, optical and medical equipment and organic chemicals. Its main trading partners are: European Union, The United States, Japan, Hong Kong and South Korea. This page includes a chart with historical data for China Balance of Trade.
Retail sales in China changed dramatically in the late 1970s and early 1980s as economic reforms increased the supply of food items and consumer goods, allowed state retail stores the freedom to purchase goods on their own, and permitted individuals and collectives greater freedom to engage in retail, service, and catering trades in rural and urban areas. Retail sales increased 300 percent from 1977 to 1985, rising at an average yearly rate of 13.9 percent — 10.5 percent when adjusted for inflation. In the 1980s retail sales to rural areas increased at an annual rate of 15.6 percent, outpacing the 9.7 percent increase in retail sales to urban areas and reflecting the more rapid rise in rural incomes. In 1977 sales to rural areas comprised 52 percent of total retail sales; in 1984 rural sales accounted for 59.2 percent of the total. Consumer goods comprised approximately 88 percent of retail sales in 1985, the remaining 12 percent consisting of farming materials and equipment.
The number of retail sales enterprises also expanded rapidly in the 1980s. In 1985 there were 10.7 million retail, catering, and service establishments, a rise of 850 percent over 1976. Most remarkable in the expansion of retail sales was the rapid rise of collective and individually owned retail establishments. Individuals engaged in businesses numbered 12.2 million in 1985, more than 40 times the 1976 figure. Furthermore, as state-owned businesses either were leased or turned over to collective ownership or were leased to individuals, the share of state-owned commerce in total retail sales dropped from 90.3 percent in 1976 to 40.5 percent in 1985.
In 1987 most urban retail and service establishments, including state, collective, and private businesses or vendors, were located either in major downtown commercial districts or in small neighborhood shopping areas. The neighborhood shopping areas were numerous and were situated so that at least one was within easy walking distance of almost every household. They were able to supply nearly all the daily needs of their customers. A typical neighborhood shopping area in Beijing would contain a one-story department store, bookstore, hardware store, bicycle repair shop, combined tea shop and bakery, restaurant, theater, laundry, bank, post office, barbershop, photography studio, and electrical appliance repair shop. The department stores had small pharmacies and carried a substantial range of housewares, appliances, bicycles, toys, sporting goods, fabrics, and clothing. Major shopping districts in big cities contained larger versions of the neighborhood stores as well as numerous specialty shops, selling such items as musical instruments, sporting goods, hats, stationery, handicrafts, cameras, and clocks.
Supplementing these retail establishments were free markets in which private and collective businesses provided services, hawked wares, or sold food and drinks. Peasants from surrounding rural areas marketed their surplus produce or sideline production in these markets. In the 1980s urban areas also saw a revival of "night markets," free markets that operated in the evening and offered extended service hours that more formal establishments could not match.


Trade in china