US$17 billion question: why China and South Africa are so far apart on trade data
Statistical discrepancy reflects different reporting practices and ‘opaque’ global commodity chains, according to observers

The latest Chinese customs data suggests that South Africa actually holds a surplus – exporting more to the world’s second-largest economy than it receives in return.
According to the numbers from Beijing, China recorded US$30.58 billion in imports from South Africa last year.
However, the South African data for the same period – via the United Nations International Trade Statistics Database, or UN Comtrade – shows the country shipped goods worth US$13.5 billion to China.

Observers said this multibillion-dollar statistical gap was a reflection of how the true flow of goods between nations could be masked by different reporting practices and “opaque” global commodity chains.