In 2025, China’s export growth in telecoms, computer and information services far outpaced exports of traditional goods, such as footwear

For decades, the global image of Chinese trade was synonymous with massive container ships loaded with footwear, bags and furniture. However, a profound structural shift is under way.

Having conquered the world of physical goods, China is now rapidly ascending the industrial chain as an emerging exporter of manufacturing technology.

In 2025, the country’s exports of telecoms, computer and information services reached 808 billion yuan (US$118 billion), marking a robust 13 per cent year-on-year increase. It far outpaced export growth in traditional goods, such as footwear, which fell 9 per cent to US$46 billion in the same period, or handbags and suitcases, which saw a collective export decline of 13 per cent to US$30 billion, according to official data.

“China’s new trade front with the world is the export of services such as information and communication technology, construction management, engineering services, data analytics and research and development,” wrote Bank of America chief market strategist Joseph Quinlan in an article published recently in the Financial Times.

Guangzhou, Guangdong province-based iRootech is among the growing number of Chinese companies that export its industrial computer vision and artificial intelligence technology. It secured its first foreign client, German concrete machinery maker Putzmeister, in 2017, and has since worked with thousands of companies overseas, said Xiao Tingting, the company’s head of global business.

It developed a maintenance platform that can remotely manage concrete equipment and predict future malfunctions using artificial intelligence. As a result, it helped the German firm, which does business in more than 30 countries, reduce travel costs related to after-sales service by 25 per cent.

Source: News - South China Morning Post