China Daily

Indexes indicate business picking up

- By JIANG XUEQING and CHEN JIA Contact the writers at jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s manufactur­ing purchasing managers index stood at 52 in March, up from 35.7 in February, showing a significan­t, positive change in production and business operations from the previous month.

The nonmanufac­turing business activities index was 52.3, compared with 29.6 last month. The comprehens­ive PMI output index rose to 53 from 28.9, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Tuesday.

“The month-over-month PMI rebound in March reflected the improvemen­t in production and business operations from the previous month, as the majority of enterprise­s are steadily pushing ahead with the resumption of work and production. But it does not mean that the actual status of production has returned to the level before the novel coronaviru­s outbreak,” said the head of the service survey center at the NBS.

Observatio­n needed

“We cannot draw a conclusion that China’s economy has completely returned to normal simply because PMI rose above the neutral 50 mark dividing expansion from contractio­n for a single month. We still need to continuous­ly observe changes in the economy to see whether there is a trend of getting better,” the official said in the transcript of an interview with China Informatio­n News posted on the NBS website on Tuesday.

As of March 25, 96.6 percent of the large and medium-sized enterprise­s surveyed by purchasing managers in China had resumed work, 17.7 percentage points higher than on Feb 25.

The production index, one of the five subindexes comprising the manufactur­ing PMI, rose to 54.1 from 27.8, indicating that manufactur­ing production activity had picked up. The new orders subindex rose to 52 from 29.3, indicating that market demand had recovered, said Wen Bin, chief analyst at China Minsheng Banking Corp.

“Both manufactur­ing and nonmanufac­turing PMIs climbed above the 50 mark, showing improvemen­t in economic activities. But analysts still have to follow economic trends afterward to tell whether the economy has recovered,” Wen said.

“Next, China should further step up countercyc­lical regulation, coordinate its financial, fiscal and employment policies, overcome obstacles for the resumption of production, increase the provision of funds, lower financing costs for the real economy and ensure that the economy continues to show signs of improvemen­t,” he said.

Looking ahead, PMI may fluctuate in the second quarter due to the rapid spread of the pandemic worldwide, said Lian Ping, chief economist at Zhixin Investment.

“We should watch the global spread of the disease closely, which may lead to a contractio­n of external demand and force business activities to halt. As a result, the manufactur­ing PMI may drop again in April, but the degree of decline will be lower than that of the first two months of this year,” Lian said.

External changes will also affect exports, employment, incomes, consumptio­n and market expectatio­ns, he said.

Slowdown projected

The World Bank forecast slower economic growth in the East Asia and Pacific region, which has been hit by the novel coronaviru­s, in the face of the prospect of a global financial shock and recession.

China’s economic growth is projected to decline to 2.3 percent in the baseline or most likely scenario and to 0.1 percent in a worse-case scenario in 2020, down from 6.1 percent in 2019, the World Bank said in the updated economic report for the East Asia and Pacific region issued on Tuesday.

Ma Jun, a member of the central bank’s monetary policy committee, said at a recent online seminar that it would be difficult for China’s GDP growth to reach 6 percent this year. Given the uncertaint­ies, Ma suggested that a GDP growth target should not be set for 2020, the Economic Daily reported on Tuesday.

An unrealisti­c target would push local government­s to take aggressive stimulus measures, especially by promoting infrastruc­ture investment. That could lead to a “flood” of monetary easing, and capital-intensive infrastruc­ture investment­s would not be helpful for reducing unemployme­nt in the short run, he said.

 ?? GENG YUHE / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Workers produce mobile phone cameras in Xinpu Industrial Park, Haizhou Economic Developmen­t Zone, Jiangsu province, on Tuesday. Jiangsu has introduced a series of policies cutting taxes and fees to help the park’s foreign companies cope with the impact of COVID-19.
GENG YUHE / FOR CHINA DAILY Workers produce mobile phone cameras in Xinpu Industrial Park, Haizhou Economic Developmen­t Zone, Jiangsu province, on Tuesday. Jiangsu has introduced a series of policies cutting taxes and fees to help the park’s foreign companies cope with the impact of COVID-19.

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