Kuwait Times

Property, credit booms stabilize China growth

GDP grows 6.7 percent as expected

-

BEIJING: China’s economy expanded at a steady 6.7 percent in the third quarter and looks set to hit Beijing’s full-year target, fueled by stronger government spending, record bank lending and a red-hot property market that are adding to its growing pile of debt. Yesterday’s data painted a picture of an economy that is slowly stabilizin­g but increasing­ly dependent on government spending and a housing boom for growth, as private investment and exports remain stubbornly weak.

Some economists believe Beijing has had to “double down” on stimulus this year to meet its official growth range of 6.5 to 7 percent, and say the government’s obsession with meeting hard targets may hurt both planned reforms and the long-term health of the world’s second-largest economy. “So far this year they have clearly chosen to do everything they can to meet the growth targets, and now there is a little bit of an upward surprise from the housing market which actually will help them with GDP growth this year,” said Louis Kuijs, head Of Asia economics at Oxford Economics in Hong Kong.

“The question really is, is the leadership willing to move to somewhat lower growth targets in order to put growth on a more sustainabl­e footing, or will it feel obliged to continue to hang on to those very high growth targets.” The economy grew at the same clip in the third quarter year-on-year as in the first and second quarters, as analysts polled by Reuters had expected. Government infrastruc­ture projects and the property boom have spurred prices and demand for raw materials and goods from cement and steel to furniture. On a quarterly basis, it grew 1.8 percent, again in line with expectatio­ns but easing slightly from the previous period.

Economists believe the greatest nearterm risk for China is a possible correction in the high-flying property market, which accounts for about 15 percent of GDP. Real estate investment accelerate­d in September and home sales soared, highlighti­ng persistent investor demand even as more cities tighten measures to curb prices. Property investment growth ticked up to 7.8 percent in September on-year, and property sales surged 34 percent, though new constructi­on starts fell 19.4 percent, suggesting sentiment among builders may be shifting as the government looks to cool the buying frenzy.

A wave of restrictio­ns imposed on buyers in major cities since early October has resulted in a sharp drop in sales and authoritie­s are stepping up pressure on speculator­s. Shanghai said on Tuesday it had punished some property agencies for falsifying contracts and had launched probes into some developers suspected of raising prices without authorizat­ion. Most economists do not expect house prices to collapse, arguing the market is supported by steady migration to bigger cities, but memories are still fresh of authoritie­s’ heavy-handed attempt to cool surging stock markets last year, which triggered a crash and an unpreceden­ted government rescue.

The property craze has also heightened concerns about China’s growing debt and the risks to its financial system, as much of the record loan growth has been driven by mortgages. China’s debt has soared to 250 percent of GDP and the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s (BIS) warned in September that a banking crisis was looming in the next three years. “We think that the cooling measures in property market will weigh on China’s economy over the coming quarters,” Commerzban­k economist Zhou Hao in Hong Kong said in a note. But statistics bureau spokesman Sheng Laiyun said “the impact (of property adjustment measures) on the economy will not be very big” in the short-term.

Consumptio­n contribute­d 71 percent of GDP growth in the first three quarters of the year, compared with 66.4 percent for 2015. The increase is partly due to contractin­g net exports but also indicates some success in Beijing’s attempts to rebalance the economy from an over reliance on investment-led growth. September indicators were mostly in line with expectatio­ns and improved slightly from August, but industrial output growth unexpected­ly cooled to 6.1 percent from a year earlier, versus expectatio­ns for 6.4 percent. Fixedasset investment rose 8.2 percent in January-September from a year earlier, as expected, as the government cranked up infrastruc­ture spending to support the economy. Fiscal spending in the ninemonth period climbed 12.5 percent.

Private investment growth picked up to 4.5 percent in September after falling to record lows in recent months, but still significan­tly lags investment by state-owned firms. For the first nine months, private investment rose just 2.5 percent. Retail sales rose 10.7 percent in September onyear, beating expectatio­ns of 10.6 percent as home buyers bought appliances and decorated, while subsidies fueled strong sales of new cars. China’s economy expanded 6.9 percent in 2015, the slowest pace in a quarter of a century.

While analysts expect China to meet its growth target this year, as usual, many remain skeptical of the official numbers, especially as growth has remain unchanged for three straight quarters even as the country attempts a major economic transition. “The official GDP figures remain too stable to tell us much about the performanc­e of China’s economy. Our own measure of economic activity suggests that growth actually picked up last quarter, though the improvemen­t clearly won’t last,” Julian Evans-Pritchard, China economist at Capital Economics in Singapore wrote in a note. Capital Economics’ calculatio­ns suggest the economy is growing at around 5 percent.— Reuters

 ??  ?? ZHENGZHOU: People ride electric bikes as they pass next to property condominiu­ms (back) in Zhengzhou yesterday. China’s growth slipped to a seven-year low of 6.6 percent in the third quarter, according to an AFP survey, despite ample stimulus and a...
ZHENGZHOU: People ride electric bikes as they pass next to property condominiu­ms (back) in Zhengzhou yesterday. China’s growth slipped to a seven-year low of 6.6 percent in the third quarter, according to an AFP survey, despite ample stimulus and a...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait