The West Midlands' £2.76 billion export surplus with has been dubbed "amazing" by the Prime Minister.
The surplus - the amount of goods shipped to the Far East compared to the amount brought in -
Speaking to the Post, Prime Minister said it was an impressive performance. By comparison, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ ran an export deficit of more than £20 billion with China in 2014.
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He said: "I think it is an amazing statistic. I think we are seeing a private sector revival in the West Midlands.
"If you look at what has has happened since 2010, we have got 127,000 more people in work.
"We have seen a tremendous recovery in the automotive sector. Obviously, has been leading the charge on that but there are other manufacturers, and component manufacturers, too.
"I think one of the previous times I was here we were looking at the extension of the runway at Birmingham Airport and making sure there were good transport links with China.
"In the so-called boom years, after the year 2000, actually private sector employment in the West Midlands went down, so the last recovery wasn't broadly balanced.
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"It wasn't a recovery that benefited the West Midlands. I am determined this time it will be different - I want not just jobs but businesses, investment, manufacturing, science, really taking root in Britain's second city and the industrial heartland of our country."
The West Midlands remained the only º£½ÇÊÓÆµ region without an export deficit with China in 2014, sending out £5.3 billion worth of goods, a 32 per cent rise, and importing £2.5 billion.
The rising surplus with China came as the West Midlands saw exports rise for the sixth successive year, to £28.6 billion worth of goods last year.
HMRC figures show that West Midlands exports also continued to grow to Asia and Oceania: trade worth £7.8 billion; EU: £11.4 billion; Middle East and North Africa: £1.8 billion; and North America: £4.8 billion.