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China’s Q2 GDP growth softens

This comes as trade row with US stirs concerns on outlook

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BEIJING: China’s economy expanded at a slower pace in the second quarter as Beijing’s efforts to contain debt hurt activity, while June factory output growth weakened to a two-year low in a worrying sign for investment and exporters as a trade war with the United States intensifie­d.

The world’s second largest economy grew 6.7% in the last quarter year-on-year – matching expectatio­ns – and looks set to meet the official 2018 growth target of around 6.5%, though the trade row with Washington, a slowing property market and lower shipments have sharply increased the risks to the outlook.

“We expect growth in the second half to be challenged by the slow credit growth and softer real estate activity.

“Also, the intensifyi­ng trade conflict with the US will start to weigh on growth,” Louis Kuijs, head Of Asia Economics for Oxford Economics in Hong Kong, wrote in a note.

The second quarter GDP figure was slightly below the first quarter’s 6.8%, the National Bureau of Statistics said, with net exports a drag on overall first half economic growth.

As the trade tussle with Washington shows no signs of ebbing and the external sector continues to weigh on China’s economy, more timely monthly activity data indicated growth was slowing at a faster pace going into the second half of the year.

First-half fixed asset investment growth was a record low, while industrial output for June matched the slowest growth rate in over two years at 6% and missed forecasts centred on 6.5% expansion.

The data weighed on Asian markets, adding to concerns about the impact from the Sino-US trade war on the global economy and China.

The Shanghai Composite index and the blue-chip CSI300, the world’s worst-performing major indexes this year, each fell over 0.6%.

MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan fell 0.4%.

On a quarterly basis, growth picked up 1.8% from 1.4% in the first quarter, beating expectatio­ns of 1.6% growth, mainly supported by domestic consumptio­n.

While factory output growth slowed overall, China’s steel mills churned out record amounts of the constructi­on material in June as producers rushed to cash in on hefty margins.

China’s economy has already felt the pinch from a multi-year crackdown on riskier lending that has driven up corporate borrowing costs, prompting the central bank to pump out more cash by cutting reserve requiremen­ts for lenders.

Data on Friday showed China’s exports grew at a solid pace in June, though analysts suggest front-loading of shipments ahead of tariffs taking effect may have boosted the figures.

Trade conflict

The administra­tion of US President Donald Trump has raised the stakes in its trade row with China, saying it would slap 10% tariffs on an extra US$200bil worth of Chinese imports.

That threat came only days after both countries slapped tit-for-tat tariffs on US$34bil worth of each other’s goods.

The property market, one of the economy’s key drivers, also slowed, as property investment posted its weakest growth in six months in June, with sales also cooling.

Faced with a slowdown in domestic demand and the trade war risks, Chinese policymake­rs have started to step up support for the economy and have softened their stance on deleveragi­ng.

Some analysts are calling for even stronger measures. “If the situation gets worse a lot faster than what we expect I do think Chinese authoritie­s need to beef up supportive measures, both fiscal and monetary,” said Iris Pang, Greater China Economist at ING in Hong Kong.

Statistics bureau spokesman Mao Shengyong told reporters yesterday that he expects more infrastruc­ture projects to be launched after the government completes its inspection­s on local government debt.

But a sustained rebound in infrastruc­ture spending could indicate some backtracki­ng on deleveragi­ng, especially if credit growth also picks up, likely exacerbati­ng the country’s debt challenge.

Fixed asset investment in infrastruc­ture grew 7.3% in the first half of the year, compared to 21.1% in the first half of 2017.

China is looking to consumer spending to drive the economy as it rebalances away from government-driven investment and the export sector, but the evidence in the first half was less encouragin­g than headline statistics suggested.

Final consumptio­n contribute­d 78.5% of first half growth, compared to 63.4% in the same period last year, and higher even than in the first quarter, when spending typically peaks due to the influence from the Chinese New Year holiday.

But that data also includes government spending and is pushed up when net exports are a negative factor as they have been this year.

Retail sales growth picked up in June from May, but year-to-date growth is down to 9.4% from 10.4% in the first half of last year.

The surveyed jobless rate in June was unchanged from May at 4.8%.

While economists are generally sanguine about China’s slower growth trajectory, many are wary of the risks to the outlook from the escalating trade dispute with the United States.

“Uncertaint­y about the scale and compositio­n of US tariffs on China’s exports is already dampening business confidence and delaying investment, especially cross-border investment,” Oxford Economics’ Kuijs said.

“If the US and China do not resume talks in the next two months or so, the conflict will escalate further, with major economic implicatio­ns for themselves and the global economy.”

 ?? — AFP ?? Slowing growth: Employees working on a micro motor production line at a factory in Huaibei in China’s eastern Anhui province. Chinese growth slowed slightly in the second quarter as the world’s number two economy faced a snowballin­g trade fight with the United States.
— AFP Slowing growth: Employees working on a micro motor production line at a factory in Huaibei in China’s eastern Anhui province. Chinese growth slowed slightly in the second quarter as the world’s number two economy faced a snowballin­g trade fight with the United States.

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