By Khanh Vu and Phuong Nguyen
HANOI (Reuters) -Vietnam's exports in August fell 7.6% from a year earlier, official data showed on Tuesday, making a sixth straight month of decline as weak global demand weighs on the export-reliant economy.
Industrial output rose 2.6% in August, however, a second successive month of growth for Vietnam, an Asian manufacturing centre for major global electronics and clothing brands.
Imports for August fell 8.3% from a year earlier to $28.55 billion, resulting in a trade surplus of $3.82 billion, the General Statistics Office (GSO) said in a report.
Vietnam is struggling from subdued global demand and tightening moves by the U.S. Federal Reserve, despite the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV) cutting policy rates four times this year to shore up growth.
Though industrial output for January-August fell 0.4% from a year earlier, the GSO said the recent factory numbers were headed in the right direction.
«The global economic difficulties in the first months of this year have affected domestic industrial production, but the August reading has shown a positive trend,» the GSO said in a statement.
Weak external demand has seen manufacturers cut tens of thousands of jobs and has prevented some businesses from taking bank loans to boost production. Credit growth slowed to 4.3% at end-July, half the rate of the same period last year.
For the first eight months, Vietnam's exports fell 10% from a year earlier to $227.71 billion, while imports were down 16.2% to $207.52 billion, with an estimated trade surplus of $20.19 billion over that period, it said. August exports were worth $32.37 billion.
January-August exports to most of Vietnam's key markets fell from a year earlier, down 19.1% to the United States
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