China remained the largest trading partner of Cambodia, followed by the United States, Vietnam, Thailand and Singapore, the report said.
It added that trade with China accounted for 21 percent of Cambodia's total trade volume of 32.8 billion dollars during the January-July period.
The main products Cambodia shipped to China were milled rice, bananas, mangos, cassava, fishery and apparels, while it imported from China mostly garment raw materials, machinery, vehicles, foodstuffs, electronics and medicines, among others.
Cambodian Ministry of Commerce's undersecretary of state and spokesman Penn Sovicheat said trade cooperation between the two countries has been rising despite the adverse impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
"China is a huge market for Cambodia, and despite the pandemic, our bilateral trade volume has steadily increased," he told Xinhua.
Sovicheat said the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) free trade agreement and the Cambodia-China Free Trade Agreement (CCFTA), both of which entered into force earlier this year, have been injecting new impetus into the trade relations between the two countries.
"Under the two free trade agreements, we're confident that our bilateral trade and investment volumes will continue to grow in the coming years," he said.
Senior economist Ky Sereyvath, director-general of the Institute of China Studies at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, agreed that both pacts have given a big boost to the trade volume between the two Asian nations.
"Through RCEP and the CCFTA, I think Cambodia can be a hub-and-spoke model to distribute goods from China to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) region in the future," he told Xinhua.
RCEP comprises 15 Asia-Pacific countries including 10 ASEAN member states -- Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam -- and their five trading partners, namely China, Japan, South Korea, Australia and New Zealand.
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