The Sun (Malaysia)

Surprise rise in China factory growth, but service industries slip

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BEIJING: Growth in China’s manufactur­ing sector unexpected­ly accelerate­d in August, suggesting the world’s secondlarg­est economy is still expanding at a healthy clip despite rising financing costs and a cooling housing market.

The official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to 51.7 in August from the previous month’s 51.4, and remained well above the 50-point mark that separates growth from contractio­n on a monthly basis.

Analysts surveyed by Reuters had forecast the reading would come in at 51.3, little changed from July.

China’s resilience has surprised economists so far this year and given an extra boost to a global recovery despite a crackdown on riskier types of lending and ever tougher curbs to get the overheated housing market under control.

The economy grew by a better-thanexpect­ed 6.9% in the first half, fuelled by a year-long constructi­on boom, resurgent exports and robust retail sales.

The building boom has fueled demand and prices for everything from cement to steel, giving China’s industrial giants their best profits in years and more cash flow to pay down a mountain of debt.

But China watchers insist the economy will start to lose some steam eventually, as higher borrowing costs drag on activity in coming quarters.

A sub-index for the constructi­on sector fell to 58.0 in August from 62.5 in July, the PMI survey by the National Bureau of Statistics showed yesterday.

While still quite robust, the lower reading may suggest the strong economic impulse from a massive government infrastruc­ture spree is starting to fade.

Data for July came in mostly below expectatio­ns as growth in imports faltered, while industrial output grew at the slowest pace since early this year.

Still, economists do not foresee a sharp slowdown, especially as the government is keen to ensure stability ahead of a oncein-five-years Communist Party leadership reshuffle in the autumn.

China’s leaders are counting on growth in services and consumptio­n to rebalance their economic growth model from its heavy reliance on investment and exports. – Reuters

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