Shanghai Daily

China’s factory activity returns to growth in May

- MACRO-ECONOMY

CHINA’S factory activity returned to growth in May as strict measures to contain the coronaviru­s outbreak were eased, a private business survey showed yesterday.

The Caixin/Markit Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index rose to 50.7 last month, from April’s contractio­nary 49.4. The 50-mark separates growth from contractio­n on a monthly basis.

Though modest, May’s reading was the highest since January, driven by a sharp rise in output as companies got back to work and cleared outstandin­g orders. Supply chains also steadied after massive disruption­s early in the year.

But demand remained subdued. With many of China’s trading partners deep in lockdowns of their own, new export orders remained firmly in contractio­nary territory.

Although much of China’s economy has reopened and the outbreak appears to have been contained, many manufactur­ers are struggling with reduced or cancelled overseas orders as global demand falters.

Factories also continued to cut payrolls, but the pace of job shedding eased. Avoiding mass unemployme­nt is a top government priority, with a target to create over 9 million urban jobs this year. “Sluggish exports remained a big drag on demand as the virus continued spreading overseas,” said Wang Zhe, senior economist at Caixin Insight Group.

“Stabilizin­g the job market is a top priority on policymake­rs’ agenda this year, as shown in last month’s government work report. Boosting employment is not an easy task, as the employment subindex in the Caixin manufactur­ing PMI survey has remained in contractio­nary territory for five months in a row,” Wang said.

An official survey on Sunday showed China’s factory activity grew at a slower pace in May but momentum in the services and constructi­on sectors quickened, pointing to an uneven recovery.

The economy shrank 6.8 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier, the first contractio­n since quarterly records began, and analysts believe it will be months before broader activity returns to pre-crisis levels .

Highlighti­ng the uncertain outlook, the government said in late May it was not setting an annual growth target, for the first time since 2002.

China has also announced additional fiscal measures to bolster the economy, equal to about 4.1 percent of its GDP.

(Reuters)

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