Global Times

Retail sales jump 4.7% y-o-y as consumptio­n strengthen­s

- By Li Xuanmin

China’s first-quarter retail sales jumped 4.7 percent year-on-year to 12.03 trillion yuan ($1.66 trillion), the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) announced on Tuesday, underscori­ng stable consumptio­n expansion after a surge in consumer spending during the Spring Festival holidays at the beginning of the year.

As consumer confidence continues to rebound and macro policies to shore up the market bear fruit, observers expect China’s consumptio­n recovery momentum to “strengthen moderately” throughout the year, providing new impetus to propel the world’s second-largest economy to reach a GDP growth target of around 5 percent.

“The consumer market was a relatively positive area in the economy during the first quarter and there were multiple highlights. Spending on consumer products such as food, daily necessitie­s and some housingrel­ated items remained stable, while holiday consumptio­n continued to boom,” Sheng Laiyun, deputy director of the NBS, said at a press briefing hosted by the State Council Informatio­n Office on Tuesday.

During the Spring Festival in February and Qingming Festival holidays in April, both the numbers of travelers and tourism revenues surpassed the levels of 2019, recording doubledigi­t growth, according to Sheng.

Analysts expect the upcoming May Day holidays to be another “prosperous” period for consumptio­n, giving another huge boost to GDP.

Consumptio­n contribute­d 73.7 percent of the economic output expansion, Sheng noted.

In March alone, retail sales rose 3.1 percent, NBS data showed, slowing by 2.4 percentage points from the first two months due to a number of factors including the high base effect and flat real estate sales.

Retail sales excluding vehicles were up 3.9 percent year-on-year in March, according to the NBS data.

“Retail spending maintained expansion in the first quarter and the level of growth was in line with market expectatio­ns. It shows that consumers’ confidence and their willingnes­s to spend could be gradually recovering, though property sales remain a drag,” Zhou Maohua, a macroecono­mist at China Everbright Bank, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

In March 2023, retail sales jumped 10.6 percent year-on-year as consumers released pent-up demand after the optimizati­on of the COVID-19 management policies. Retail sales also recorded double-digit growth in April and May in 2023.

Taking account of the high base effect, it is expected that consumer spending will stage only a moderate expansion in the second quarter, but it’s likely to accelerate in the second half. Observers and Chinese officials also voiced their confidence that there will be more drivers for China’s consumptio­n dynamics throughout the year.

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