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<article xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="http://jats.nlm.nih.gov/publishing/1.1/xsd/JATS-journalpublishing1-mathml3.xsd" dtd-version="1.1" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"><front><journal-meta><journal-id journal-id-type="publisher-id">EDS</journal-id><journal-title-group><journal-title>Economic Development Studies</journal-title></journal-title-group><issn>3069-034X</issn><eissn>3069-0358</eissn><publisher><publisher-name>Art and Technology</publisher-name></publisher></journal-meta><article-meta><article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.61369/EDS.202601004</article-id><article-categories><subj-group subj-group-type="heading"><subject>Article</subject></subj-group></article-categories><title>Analysis of Complementarity in Agricultural Trade between China and Central Asian Nations</title><url>https://artdesignp.com/journal/EDS/2/1/10.61369/EDS.202601004</url><author>LiuHuijuan,ZhaoPeng</author><pub-date pub-type="publication-year"><year>2026</year></pub-date><volume>2</volume><issue>1</issue><history><date date-type="pub"><published-time>2026-01-20</published-time></date></history><abstract>Based on 2018&amp;ndash;2023 data, this study employs the Export Similarity Index (ESI) and the Commodity Supply-Demand Matching Coefficient (CMCI) to perform a multidimensional assessment of agricultural trade complementarity between China and the five Central Asian countries. Findings show that the two sides&amp;rsquo; export structures are significantly dissimilar, resulting in strong overall complementarity. Central Asia possesses a clear advantage in land-intensive specialty products (e.g., flaxseed, raisins), in contrast to China&amp;rsquo;s advantage in processed agricultural goods (e.g., vegetable products, aquatic products), establishing a &amp;ldquo;resource-processing&amp;rdquo; dual-track complementary relationship. Analysis at the country level reveals a gradient distribution in the degree of complementarity. The evaluation further identifies high trade potential across scale, structure, policy, and infrastructure dimensions, with specific high-growth sectors including natural honey and frozen fish. The paper thus supplies empirical evidence and policy recommendations for optimizing agricultural cooperation.</abstract><keywords>Agricultural trade, Trade complementarity, Central Asia region, China</keywords></article-meta></front><body/><back><ref-list><ref id="B1" content-type="article"><label>1</label><element-citation publication-type="journal"><p>[1] Wang J, 2025, Jingcai Observation China-The Win-Win Code Behind the Record High Economic and Trade Scale in Central Asia. Toutiao, visited on January 21, 2026, http://m.toutiao.com/group/7516680192916603429/?upstream_biz=doubao
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