News Finances

China-Africa Trade Rose 15.4% to $222 Billion in First Eight Months of 2025

China-Africa Trade Rose 15.4% to $222 Billion in First Eight Months of 2025
Wednesday, 24 September 2025 15:58

• China-Africa trade reached $222.05 billion between January and August 2025, up 15.4% year-on-year.
• Chinese exports to Africa surged 24.7% to $140.79 billion, while imports from Africa grew only 2.3% to $81.25 billion.
• Africa’s trade deficit with China widened to $59.55 billion, nearly matching the full-year 2024 level of $61.93 billion.

Bilateral trade between China and Africa climbed to $222.05 billion in the first eight months of 2025, rising 15.4% from the same period in 2024, China’s General Administration of Customs reported on September 22.

The increase came mainly from higher Chinese exports to Africa, which rose 24.7% year-on-year to $140.79 billion. Analysts link this growth to Beijing’s pivot toward emerging markets as the U.S. raises tariffs on Chinese goods.

Chinese imports from Africa advanced only 2.3% to $81.25 billion in the same period. The imbalance pushed Africa’s trade deficit with China to $59.55 billion, nearly equal to the $61.93 billion recorded for all of 2024.

The structural imbalance reflects Africa’s export reliance on raw materials such as crude oil, copper, cobalt, and iron ore, while importing high-value-added manufactured goods from China.

Chinese exports of solar equipment to Africa highlighted the disparity. Between July 2024 and June 2025, Africa imported 15,032 megawatts of Chinese solar panels, up 60% from 9,379 MW in the previous 12 months.

China’s exports to Africa also included machinery, electronics, and green technologies, reinforcing its position as the continent’s leading supplier of manufactured products.

Tariff Reductions to Narrow the Gap

China has taken steps to address the imbalance. It eliminated tariffs on 98% of imports from 21 African countries, including Ethiopia, Guinea, Mozambique, Rwanda, and Togo. Since December 1, 2024, Beijing also applies zero tariffs on all imports from least developed countries (LDCs) with diplomatic ties, including 33 African nations.

These measures align with pledges made by President Xi Jinping at the 8th Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC) in Dakar in 2021. Xi committed to raising China’s imports of African agricultural goods to $100 billion annually from 2022 and to $300 billion annually by 2035.

This article was initially published in French by Walid Kéfi

Adapted in English by Ange Jason Quenum

 

On the same topic
Africa-based investors accounted for 30% of active VC players in 2025 Total VC funding reached $3.9 billion across 506 deals Venture debt jumped...
Cameroon will issue the first 15-year OTA in CEMAC on February 17, 2026. The Treasury seeks CFA20 billion to test demand beyond the 10-year...
IFC considers up to $8 million in Aruwa Fund II $50 million fund targets Nigerian, Ghanaian SMEs Focus on women-led firms in underserved...
Vista acquires 99.99% of Saham Assurances Niger Company rebranded as Vista Assurances Niger Deal marks entry into Niger’s small insurance...
Most Read
01

Absa Kenya hires M-PESA’s Sitoyo Lopokoiyit, signalling a shift from branch banking to a telecom-s...

Absa Kenya Imports a Telecom Playbook in Bid to Reinvent Retail Banking
02

Ziidi Trader enables NSE share trading via M-Pesa M-Pesa revenue rose 15.2% to 161.1 billio...

Safaricom launches M-Pesa platform for stock trading in Kenya
03

Deposits grow 2.7%, supporting lending recovery Average loan sizes small, credit risk persists ...

Togo Microfinance: Deposits and Loans Rise Simultaneously in Q3 2025
04

Oil majors expand offshore exploration from Senegal to Angola Gulf of Guinea accounts for about 1...

Gulf of Guinea regains appeal as a key exploration hub for oil majors
05

MTN Group has no official presence in the Democratic Republic of Congo, where the mobile market is d...

DRC Accuses MTN of Illegal Operations, Spotlighting Border Frequency Issues
Enter your email to receive our newsletter

Ecofin Agency provides daily coverage of nine key African economic sectors: public management, finance, telecoms, agribusiness, mining, energy, transport, communication, and education.
It also designs and manages specialized media, both online and print, for African institutions and publishers.

SALES & ADVERTISING

regie@agenceecofin.com 
Tél: +41 22 301 96 11 
Mob: +41 78 699 13 72


EDITORIAL
redaction@agenceecofin.com

More information
Team
Publisher

ECOFIN AGENCY

Mediamania Sarl
Rue du Léman, 6
1201 Geneva
Switzerland

 

Ecofin Agency is a sector-focused economic news agency, founded in December 2010. Its web platform was launched in June 2011. ©Mediamania.

 
 

Please publish modules in offcanvas position.