China imported 8.5 million metric tons of soybeans during April 2026, more than double the 4 mmt imported during March. The April total was 2.4 mmt ahead of imports in April last year. Detailed April import data have not been released yet. During March 2026 China imported 1.85 mmt from the U.S., 1.4 mmt from Brazil, 400,000 mt from Argentina, and 247,500 mt from Russia. The volume arriving from Brazil is set to balloon in coming months. China customs administration. Brazil's exports to China have been ramping up as this year's soybean crop--estimated by USDA to be a record-breaking 180 mmt--makes its way to ports. Brazil's soybean exports to China were a record-high 11.58 mmt during April. The April volume was up about 1.6 mmt from March. Some March shipments may have been delayed to April by stringent port inspections that caused a backlog of cargoes--the inspection issue at both Brazilian and Chinese ports apparently has been cleared up. Exports to China for 2026 match l...
China's National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) has massively overstated income growth for years. In 2025, NBS reported that China's GDP and household income both grew 5.0%. Another obscure data item reported by the Bureau showed that the monthly earnings of employed rural people grew just 2.3%, less than half the growth in GDP. This number, buried in an obscure report on rural migrants , is also overstated and ignores unpaid wages, one of the chief drivers of protests and sabotage in China last year. Drilling down into China's household income data report to ensure an apples-to-apples comparison shows an even bigger discrepancy. Rural household income from wages grew 6.1% in 2025. That's more than double the 2.3% growth in earnings by rural migrants. (Urban households' wage income grew 4.1%.) China's National Bureau of Statistics. The history of monthly earnings from the rural migrant survey shows that growth in wages for rural migrants--who staff the construction...