Shanghai Daily

Manufactur­ing activity index slips

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CHINA’S manufactur­ing activity index edged down in August amid external uncertaint­ies, but the industrial upgrade continued apace as the country strives to shift the focus on high-productivi­ty industries.

The purchasing managers’ index for the manufactur­ing sector dipped to 49.5 in August from 49.7 in July, below the 50-point mark that separates expansion from contractio­n, the National Bureau of Statistics data showed on Saturday.

A breakdown of the data showed manufactur­ing production maintained expansion, but market demand was suppressed amid a complex economic environmen­t, according to NBS senior statistici­an Zhao Qinghe.

The sub-index for production edged down 0.2 points to 51.9 in August, signaling continuous expansion but at a slower pace, while that for new orders was down by 0.1 points to 49.7. The new export order sub-index, however, rebounded by 0.3 points to 47.2.

Among the 21 industries surveyed, 17 were in the expansion zone, up from 12 in July, and 11 recorded monthon-month PMI increases. The reading also showed industrial upgrading continued apace, with high-tech manufactur­ing and consumptio­n-related sectors maintainin­g rapid expansion, Zhao said.

The PMI of high-tech manufactur­ing and consumer goods industries stood at 51.2 and 50.9, respective­ly, exceeding the overall manufactur­ing activity index by 1.7 and 1.4 points. The PMI for the nonmanufac­turing sector came in at 53.8 in August, up from 53.7 in July.

The service sector activity levelled slightly, with the sub-index down 0.4 points to 52.5, as adverse weather conditions took a toll on industries including airlines, hotels, catering and tourism.

However, the sub-index of service-sector business expectatio­ns, a gauge of companies’ confidence toward the prospects of future operations, climbed 0.7 points to 59.8.

Saturday’s data also showed China’s composite PMI edged down 0.1 points to 53, which had remained in a range of 53 to 53.4 for five consecutiv­e months and indicated steady business expansion.

China has stepped up targeted measures to support economic growth and minimize downside risks, including efforts to lower the costs of financing via reform of the loan prime rate and a policy package to encourage consumptio­n.

Economists advised the government to make countercyc­lical adjustment­s in a timely manner and moderately loosen monetary policy.

(Xinhua)

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