Millennium Post (Kolkata)

China’s economic growth plunges to 0.4% in second quarter

China’s zero-Covid policy led to prolonged lockdowns in top cities & damaged businesses & supply chains ABRIDGE NOTICE INVITING TENDER

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BEIJING: China’s economy contracted sharply in the second quarter plunging to 0.4 per cent, the lowest in two years, as the world’s second largest economy was hit hard by the zero-COVID policy that led to prolonged lockdowns in top cities and damaged businesses and industrial supply chains, according to official data on Friday.

China’s economic growth fell short of expectatio­ns and grew by just 0.4 per cent in the second quarter of 2022 compared with a year earlier, the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) announced.

It is the lowest growth rate since China’s economy shrank by 6.8 per cent in the first quarter of 2020 after the coronaviru­s, which first surfaced in Wuhan and later spread to the world.

But at the same time, China’s gross domestic product (GDP) expanded 2.5 per cent year-onyear in the first half of 2022, the NBS data said. China has set its GDP growth target for 2022 at around 5.5 per cent.

The slowdown of the economy comes ahead of the ruling Communist Party of China’s key once-in-a-five-year congress expected to be held shortly, which is widely expected to endorse an unpreceden­ted third term for President Xi Jinping.

Xi, 68, will be the only Chinese leader after party founder Mao Zedong to continue in power for more than two-five year terms and perhaps for life.

Playing down the sharp contractio­n of the economy, NBS spokesman Fu Linghui said, “We should be aware that the foundation for a sustainabl­e and steady recovery of the economy is yet to be consolidat­ed.”

This is because externally, the risk of stagflatio­n in the world economy is rising, the policies of major economies tend to be tightened, and external instabilit­ies and uncertaint­ies are adding obviously”, he said.

Also domestical­ly, the impact of the epidemic is lingering, shrinking demand intertwine­s with disrupted supply, structural problems combine with cyclical problems and market entities still face operationa­l difficulti­es, Fu said.

More efforts will be made to implement a package of stimulus policy measures and keep the economic operation within a reasonable range, he said.

On Thursday, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang cautioned that the Chinese economy is going through stressful times.

Li, the second-ranking leader of CPC who oversees the economy, told a symposium that the foundation of economic recovery should be consolidat­ed and called for efforts to bring the economy back on a normal track.

China’s economic developmen­t went through “extremely rare” circumstan­ces in the second quarter of this year, with unexpected factors triggering severe shocks and downward pressure increasing, Li said.

Under the circumstan­ces, major economic indicators saw a substantia­l decline in April, he was quoted by the official media here as saying.

With a raft of economy-stabilisin­g policies taking effect quickly, these indicators pointed to a hard-fought recovery in May and June. However, the foundation for recovery is still unstable and requires more arduous efforts to prop up the economic fundamenta­ls, Li said.

To keep the economy running within an appropriat­e range, the country should place equal emphasis on stabilisin­g economic growth and curbing inflation, particular­ly imported inflation. It should ensure both the intensity and rationalit­y of the macroecono­mic policy, he said.

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