China Daily (Hong Kong)

Factory output rises in Sept

Manufactur­ing of equipment and high-tech gear increases during first nine months

- By LIU ZHIHUA liuzhihua@chinadaily.com.cn

Industrial output rose by 6.9 percent on a yearly basis in September in China, the sixth consecutiv­e month of growth, data from the National Bureau of Statistics showed on Monday.

During the first three quarters of the year, industrial output rose by 1.2 percent on a yearly basis, reversing the decline of 1.3 percent seen in the first six months. Industrial output i n September rose by 1.3 percentage points from the level seen in August, the NBS said.

High-tech and equipment manufactur­ing output rose by 5.9 percent and 4.7 percent respective­ly on a yearly basis during the first nine months of the year. Private sector output rose by 2.1 percent during the same period, while that of Statecontr­olled enterprise­s went up by 0.9 percent.

Profits of China’s i ndustrial firms, or designated large enterprise­s with an annual business turnover of at l east 20 million yuan ($2.98 million), reached 3.72 trillion yuan i n the first eight months. Although the figure fell by 4.4 percent from a year earlier, the decline was 3.7 percentage points less than that seen in the first seven months.

Experts said the strong data are an indication of the remarkable resilience of the Chinese economy and its upward trajectory on the back of the effective COVID-19 control and other policy measures to offset the economic impact of the epidemic.

The measures included the focus on six key fronts for ensuring stability and “six priorities”, they said. The six fronts refer to employment, the financial sector, foreign trade, foreign investment, domestic investment, and expectatio­ns, while the “six priorities” refer to job security, basic living needs, operations of market entities, food and energy security, stable industrial and supply chains, and the normal functionin­g of primarylev­el government­s.

“It is obvious that by September the COVID-19 had a limited effect on the Chinese economy, considerin­g the growth in business and production; and people are less panicky thanks to the effective epidemic control measures,” said Zhang Yansheng, chief research fellow at the China Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges.

The government has rolled out a series of policies to help market entities cope with the challenges caused by the disease outbreak. With the removal of social distancing restrictio­ns, normal operations of production supply chains and logistics facilities have resumed, and so has consumptio­n. Chinese firms, especially small and medium-sized enterprise­s that account for a huge chunk of the national economic activity, are able to operate and resume production at normal levels, he said.

Zhang Jianping, director general of the China Center for Regional Economic Cooperatio­n, which is under Chinese Academy of Internatio­nal Trade and Economic Cooperatio­n, said effective disease control and a strong domestic market have spurred industrial output, while the easing of the pandemic in foreign countries and Chinese companies’ readiness to serve the reviving overseas markets also contribute­d to the growth.

Both experts said i ndustrial output growth, especially in sectors like equipment and high-tech manufactur­ing, also demonstrat­ed the Chinese economy’s transition toward high-quality developmen­t, including advances in s mart manufactur­ing, and growing applicatio­n of internet and other smart technologi­es in industrial sectors.

Zhang Yansheng from the Center for Internatio­nal Economic Exchanges said it is important to cultivate new developmen­t momentum, new business forms, and new economic structure, and promote upgrading in manufactur­ing, services and new type of urbanizati­on, to inject strong and sustainabl­e growth impetus to the Chinese economy.

Zhang Jianping from the Center for Regional Economic Cooperatio­n said Chinese companies must further tap domestic market through deepening supply-side reforms, because uncertaint­ies remain in overseas markets, in the wake of the second wave of the pandemic in many foreign countries, and also because of rising protection­ism.

 ?? GENG YUHE / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An employee works on the production line of a textile company in Lianyungan­g, Jiangsu province.
GENG YUHE / FOR CHINA DAILY An employee works on the production line of a textile company in Lianyungan­g, Jiangsu province.

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