As businesses at home and abroad are preparing to celebrate the Lunar New Year, here are some notable facts and figures regarding Australia’s relationship with major trading partner China.
1: China is Australia’s largest two-way trading partner, accounting for a third of Australian trade globally.
5: The dragon is the fifth number in the Chinese zodiac system, following the rabbit, and preceding the snake. Australia is also China’s fifth-largest source of imports, behind Taiwan, the Republic of Korea, Japan, and the United States.
5.9%: Chinese food prices fell 5.9% over the year to January 2024, new data shows, sparking fears of softening consumer demand in China’s post-lockdown recovery.
7: How many years between Albanese’s November trip to China and the previous visit by a sitting PM. That was former Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who attended in 2016.
11: The number of Australian businesses highlighted by SmartCompany in 2022 for their exceptional forays into the Chinese market.
30: Years since Catherine Cervasio founded Aromababy, a natural skincare brand that has enjoyed significant success in the Chinese market. Cervasio has now become a leading voice for local SMEs considering their own forays into China.
200%: The tariff imposed on imported Australian wines by the Chinese government in 2020, as part of a broader trade dispute between the two nations. Trade Minister Don Farrell says he is confident the wine restrictions will be lifted early this year.
250: Approximately how many Australian businesses exhibited at CIIE 2023, marking a record Aussie contingent at the trade fair.
$500 million: The unofficial estimated value of deals penned by Australian exhibitors over the CIIE trade fair, according to the Australia China Business Council.
$1.2 billion: The value of Australia’s annual wine exports to China before the Chinese government imposed tariffs on Australian wine.