New Era

China factory activity edges up in November

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BEIJING - China’s factory activity grew at its fastest pace in over three years in November, official data showed yesterday, as the world’s second-largest economy continued its recovery from the coronaviru­s.

The Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI), a key gauge of manufactur­ing activity in China, has largely rebounded following strict measures to curb the virus early in the year, coming in at 52.1 this month.

This was higher than October’s reading of 51.4, and remains above the 50-point mark separating growth from contractio­n.

The latest figures also bring the PMI data back to levels seen in September 2017.

Analysts said improvemen­t in both domestic and external demand boosted manufactur­ing activity.

“The main driver was a rise in new orders... In particular, the export orders component picked up,” said Julian EvansPritc­hard, senior China economist of consultanc­y Capital Economics.

“This suggests that China’s exports continue to benefit from strong foreign demand for Chinese-made goods beyond Covid-19 related products, although fresh lockdowns abroad might have boosted demand for shipments of the latter.”

Zhao Qinghe, senior statistici­an at the National Bureau of Statistics, which publishes the PMI, said yesterday both the production and new orders indexes edged up.

Both sub-indexes fared well in industries relating to high-tech manufactur­ing such as pharmaceut­icals, electrical machinery and equipment, he added.

But recovery in the manufactur­ing industry remains “uneven”, Zhao said. Official data showed that small enterprise­s, which were hurt more by the outbreak, continued to lag behind large businesses.

China is expected to be the only major economy to record positive growth this year.

The non-manufactur­ing PMI came in at 56.4 in November, slightly higher than the month before, signalling further recovery in the services sector.

Lu Ting, chief China economist at investment bank Nomura, said yesterday that China’s domestic recovery was on track thanks to its Covid-19 containmen­t, although “an extended pandemic may eventually dampen demand for China’s exports if the purchasing power in overseas economies diminishes”.

While there were sporadic virus outbreaks in Shanghai, Tianjin and Inner Mongolia, which Lu earlier said could slow recovery in service industries, the impact appears “limited” for now.

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