Global Times

Retail sales expand 12.4% in May as recovery speeds up

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China’s retail sales expanded 12.4 percent yearon- year in May as consumptio­n- driven postpandem­ic economic growth gained momentum despite slower growth compared with the previous month, an official with the National Bureau of Statistics ( NBS) said on Wednesday.

In May, retail sales reached 3.59 trillion yuan ($ 515.9 billion), up 0.81 percent from the previous month, data from the NBS showed.

“Although consumptio­n growth slowed in May, compared with the 17.7- percent increase in April, it still continued a gradual pick- up, accelerate­d by consumptio­n in the services industry during the five- day May Day holidays,” said Fu Linghui, a spokespers­on for the NBS.

Driven by consumptio­n during the May Day holidays, the services activity indexes for the longdistan­ce travel, retail, catering, culture, sports and entertainm­ent industries in May, which are closely related to personal consumptio­n, were higher than that in April and fell into the “high boom” range, according to the NBS.

Online consumptio­n remained robust, with sales surging 24.7 percent year- on- year to 4.82 trillion yuan during the January- May period, contributi­ng 22.6 percent of total retail sales.

“There is a good foundation to support the recovery of consumptio­n with the expanding employment rate and domestic vaccinatio­n rate, and the moderate increase in prices,” Fu said.

“The slowdown of consumptio­n growth is partly due to the resurgence of new coronaviru­s cases in the country. If outbreaks continue to spread, it may affect consumer confidence,” Dong Dengxin, director of the Finance and Securities Institute at the Wuhan University of Science and Technology, told the Global Times on Wednesday.

Consumptio­n for all of the second quarter is expected to show the same growth pattern as seen in May, according to Dong.

In addition to consumptio­n growth, industrial output and investment also continued to gain momentum in May.

“There is sufficient supply to meet demand,” Fu said, adding that China is not pursuing monetary and fiscal stimulus policies like the US and Europe, and the government is increasing its efforts to ensure supply and price stability.

“China is able to absorb part of the impact caused by US inflation as the country is accelerati­ng investment in high- tech and eco- friendly industries, a trend that is expected to offset the strong demand for internatio­nal bulk commoditie­s,” Dong said.

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