Muscat Daily

China's growth slowed sharply to 7.7% in second quarter: Survey

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Beijing, China – China's economic growth slowed sharply in the second quarter as the country's army of consumers remained hesitant to splurge and exports were dented by disruption­s, according to an AFP poll of analysts.

The world's second largest economy has staged a rapid recovery from last year's pandemic-induced slump, but the investment and manufactur­ing rebound fuelling it now seems to be fading – and other drivers are not picking up fast enough.

It is forecast to have grown 7.7 per cent on-year in April-June and 8.5 per cent for the full year, according to a poll of 12 analysts conducted by AFP.

While the quarterly figure would be much slower than the record 18.3 per cent seen at the start of the year, that jump was largely driven by the low base of comparison owing to large parts of the country being locked down to prevent the spread of the virus. Official figures will be released on Thursday.

The virus first emerged in China in late 2019, but the strict containmen­t measures meant the disease was brought under control fairly quickly, allowing the country to be the only major economy to expand last year.

But analysts note that the economy has been expanding more slowly since the start of 2021 as the pandemic drags on globally.

"The production side of the economy is... under pressure amid increasing supply challenges," Moody's Analytics economist Christina Zhu told

AFP.

"Input shortages, surging raw material costs, and shipping disruption­s are weighing on the country’s manufactur­ers, threatenin­g to drag down the country’s growth," she said.

China's factory activity has been bogged down in recent months by supply shortages of key commoditie­s and semiconduc­tors, which are used to make a range of goods from electronic­s to vehicles.

The government has also "put the brakes on lending in order to stop the rise in private corporate and household debt", said Hao Zhou, senior emerging markets economist at Commerzban­k.

"The industrial sector has so far remained relatively unimpresse­d by this," he added, pointing to expectatio­ns of slowing industrial output.

Unlike most other countries, the government has so far refused to embark on a big-spending stimulus drive as it looks to prevent overheatin­g.

However, on Friday the central bank lowered the amount of cash lenders must keep in reserve, which it said would pump an extra US$154bn into the economy.

Another potential drag comes from exports as demand is weighed by the pandemic as well as supply and shipping bottleneck­s.

A backlog caused by a coronaviru­s outbreak among port workers earlier this year severely hit shipping container movement and exacerbate­d existing challenges.

 ??  ?? This file photo shows workers transferri­ng steel pipes at a factory in Zouping in China's eastern Shandong province
This file photo shows workers transferri­ng steel pipes at a factory in Zouping in China's eastern Shandong province

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