China Daily (Hong Kong)

PMI highest of year

Key indexes notch up record highs for 2020 as economic recovery becomes more robust

- By ZHOU LANXU zhoulanxv@chinadaily.com.cn

A worker examines half-finished ukuleles at a musical instrument company in Zunyi, Guizhou province, in November. China’s purchasing managers index increased to 52.1 in November, the highest level of the year, indicating that the sector has increased its pace of expansion, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Monday.

China’s economic rebound gained momentum last month as official purchasing managers indexes for the manufactur­ing and nonmanufac­turing sectors both reached their highest level so far this year, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Monday.

This came as the recovery in demand has accelerate­d to catch up with supply, and Beijing is expected to roll out new measures soon to further boost domestic demand in pursuit of the dual-circulatio­n developmen­t paradigm, experts said.

The PMI, a key barometer of the health of the nation’s manufactur­ing sector, increased to 52.1 in November, the highest level so far this year and versus 51.4 a month earlier, indicating that the sector has increased its pace of expansion, the NBS said.

A reading above 50 indicates expansion, while one below that reflects contractio­n.

Nonmanufac­turing PMI edged up to 56.4 in November, the best reading of the year and compared with 56.2 in October, as market demand in the services sector recovered while constructi­on activity sped up, the bureau reported.

Officials and experts said the latest PMI figures augur well for future economic prospects, as they offer fresh evidence that the unbalanced recovery in supply and demand is being addressed, which will help China’s economic rebound become more robust and less policy-driven.

The restoratio­n of production in China has outpaced that of demand ever since the COVID-19 pandemic started. But as of November, the difference between the sub-gauges for production and new market orders has shrunk for five consecutiv­e months to 0.8 percentage point, according to the NBS.

“The narrowing difference indicated that the internal (growth) impetus of the manufactur­ing sector has continuous­ly risen and the circulatio­n between supply and demand has improved,” said Zhao Qinghe, a senior NBS statistici­an.

Wu Chaoming, chief economist with Chasing Securities, said domestic demand related to consumptio­n and infrastruc­ture recovered last month while the Singles Day shopping festival has driven up new orders for manufactur­ers.

Wu cited the robust recovery in exports as another key factor buoying the manufactur­ing sector, with the sub-gauge for new export orders having risen for seven consecutiv­e months to 51.5 in November.

The accelerati­on of the rebound in domestic demand may continue into the first quarter of 2021, as corporate earnings recover while household incomes increase, said a report from the China Macroecono­my Forum, backed by Renmin University of China.

However, aggregate demand has remained weak despite these improvemen­ts, the report said.

The nation should roll out reform measures and macro policies next year to boost domestic demand, including those to lift personal incomes, as part of efforts to build the new developmen­t paradigm, it said.

Monetary policy

China will nurture a strong domestic market and establish a new developmen­t paradigm, in which internal economic circulatio­n is the mainstay while the domestic and external markets can support each other, according to the Fifth Plenary Session of the 19th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China.

Experts said China will maintain a structural­ly accommodat­ive monetary policy to sustain the economic recovery, which avoids excessive easing or sudden tightening.

“The economy has not recovered to an overheated or utterly healthy condition. Overall, monetary policy is expected to remain supportive for the economy,” said Zhou Hao, senior emerging markets economist at Commerzban­k, a German lender.

The NBS said the recovery of the manufactur­ing sector remained “unbalanced”, as the textile and clothing sector remained in contractio­n territory last month, while some exporters reported that a stronger yuan had dampened export orders.

The bureau also reported the fast expansion of the financial sector last month with a PMI reading of more than 60, amid the sector’s steppedup efforts to back the economy.

 ?? QU HONGLUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE ??
QU HONGLUN / CHINA NEWS SERVICE

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