The Borneo Post

China’s September exports seen slowing further

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BEIJING: China’s export growth is expected to have further slowed in September, weighed down by a faster decline in orders as an intensifyi­ng trade war with the United States starts to hurt Chinese shipments, a Reuters poll showed.

Import growth also likely came off recent highs, which would be a worrying sign for Chinese policymake­rs counting on domestic demand to shore up economic growth at a time of slower external demand.

Economists see any further slowing in China’s growth pace could prompt Beijing to roll out more stimulus measures, particular­ly steps to bolster small and medium-sized firms, a major source of employment.

China’s September export growth likely slowed to 8.9 per cent from a year earlier from August’s 9.8 per cent gain, according to the median estimate of 32 economists in the Reuters poll.

Import growth is also expected to have slowed, to 15 per cent versus a 19.9 per cent gain in August.

“We expect export growth to slow further in September as rising trade protection­ism bites. This September has one less working day than last year, which should also add downside pressure on exports,” economists at Nomura said in a recent note.

“In the medium-to-long term, if China-US trade tensions sustain, China’s growth would likely be hit beyond the scale indicated by these trade data.”

China’s overall trade surplus is expected to have shrunk to US$19.4 billion in September from US$27.89 billion in the previous month.

Growth in China’s factory sector in September stalled after 15 months of expansion, with export orders falling the most in more than two years, a private business survey showed.

An official survey also confirmed a further manufactur­ing weakening.

In Guangdong, China’s biggest province by gross domestic product and one of the most export- oriented provinces, manufactur­ing activity barely expanded in September after contractin­g the previous month, the provincial government said.

The State Council, or cabinet, has pledged to raise tax rebates for exporters for the second time this year, and Chinese officials have promised additional steps to help struggling domestic firms.

While official export data has proved surprising­ly resilient this year, many analysts believe companies have rushed out shipments to the United States to beat successive rounds of tariffs, raising the risk of a sharp drop-off after duties are actually imposed.

The world’s two biggest economies last slapped tit-for-tat tariffs on each other’s goods on Sept 24. — Reuters

 ??  ?? A man riding a bicycle outside an office building in Beijing. Economists see any further slowing in China’s growth pace could prompt Beijing to roll out more stimulus measures, particular­ly steps to bolster small and medium-sized firms, a major source of employment. – AFP photo
A man riding a bicycle outside an office building in Beijing. Economists see any further slowing in China’s growth pace could prompt Beijing to roll out more stimulus measures, particular­ly steps to bolster small and medium-sized firms, a major source of employment. – AFP photo

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