China Daily

China to drive global GDP growth this year and next

- Jiangxueqi­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

China is one of a few large economies expected to expand and substantia­lly contribute to global GDP growth in 2020 and 2021, said the authors of a latest report jointly issued by Oliver Wyman and Silk Road Associates.

“Even with manufactur­ing challenges and the potentiall­y longer and more pervasive challenges that may exist in some of the service sector, we still see growth across China and that being a key source of global growth,” said Peter Reynolds, partner and head of Oliver Wyman China.

“We’ve seen a relatively quick rebound, a V-shaped bounce, in manufactur­ing. Well over 90 percent of the factories are now back online, and many of them continue to be working to fulfill the backlog of orders that existed as the shutdowns over the Chinese Lunar New Year and their off period came through,” Reynolds said.

Imports of various supplies, essentiall­y the raw materials used in manufactur­ing, remained very robust throughout the period, allowing the manufactur­ing rebound to happen.

China’s value-added industrial output declined 8.4 percent yearon-year in the first quarter as industrial production was seriously affected by the novel coronaviru­s outbreak, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics.

“If you add the Chinese Lunar New Year break, plus the additional couple of weeks that things were stopped, you actually have 17 percent less operationa­l time. So we actually see that 8.4 percent reduction as being quite a positive result in the light of the amount of time the factories needed to shut from a manufactur­ing side of things,” Reynolds added.

“The different economic sectors and regions within China will experience varying paces of recovery, and competing influences will shape the path of growth over the next 12 months depending on the sector concentrat­ion in each region,” he said.

The recovery of the overall Chinese economy tends to be concentrat­ed in certain areas, according to data comparing changes in pollution levels over a 12-month period for 650 urban areas, said Ben Simpfendor­fer, founder and CEO of Silk Road Associates, an advisoticu­larly ry services provider.

Some pollution was identified in the Yangtze River Delta, suggesting that the recovery in coal-fired power plants and State-owned industries, especially heavy industries, was more intense there, he said.

From early to mid-February, analysts saw the return of migrant workers, particular­ly in Shenzhen and Guangzhou, Guangdong province.

“That was quite striking to us — the fact that those migrant workers were quick to come back to the southern manufactur­ing hub. Their return to the more eastern coastal manufactur­ing hubs, parWuxi, Suzhou and Ningbo, was slightly delayed, underscori­ng regional and municipal level difference­s, partly driven by demand but also the municipal level restrictio­ns on mobility and social distancing,” Simpfendor­fer said.

The report said there is a risk of a broad global recession leading to demand-driven contractio­n, which could lead to a more prolonged L-shaped recovery path for China. However, China’s reliance on exports is much reduced relative to the time of the global financial crisis of 2008-09. The share of exports to GDP has fallen significan­tly since that crisis.

Although exports will struggle with global demand falling, the offsetting impact of imports — especially in a very low oil price environmen­t — will have a relatively substantia­l mitigating effect against the decline of exports, Reynolds said.

The services sector will experience a more U-shaped recovery, with retail sales down 19 percent year-on-year in the first quarter. Within that, analysts saw a huge difference among various types of retail and services delivered through different channels. They are seeing a permanent shift to a “new normal” where digital segments become a significan­tly larger portion of services delivery.

 ?? GENG YUHE / FOR CHINA DAILY ??
GENG YUHE / FOR CHINA DAILY

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