The Pak Banker

China expected to clock weakest growth in 30 years

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China's economy grew at its slowest rate in three decades in 2019, according to an AFP poll of economists, after a year marked by weaker domestic demand and a bruising trade war with the United States. The survey of analysts at 14 institutio­ns predicted that the world's secondlarg­est economy would clock 6.1 percent gross domestic product (GDP) growth for the full year.

The figure is a clear drop from the 6.6 per cent growth achieved in 2018 -- which was the slowest pace since 1990 -- but remains within Beijing's official target of 6.0-6.5 percent. Analysts are forecastin­g six percent growth for the last three months of the year, the same as the previous quarter, with the official figure to be released Friday alongside the annual GDP result.

Oxford Economics senior economist Tommy Wu said that although GDP figures are set to hit a record low for recent decades, it was not unusual to see growth tapering off in economies undergoing restructur­ing and moving towards services and higher-value industries.

"It's natural to see the Chinese economy's growth rate slow over time, converging to something more sustainabl­e over the long run," he said.

Wu said that apart from the USChina trade war, which weighed on manufactur­ing and exports over the year, government stimulus measures had also taken a toll. He said authoritie­s had focused on encouragin­g demand with tax cuts, which were "not as effective when it comes to boosting the economy, compared with other means such as infrastruc­ture spending".

Analysts from the China Internatio­nal Capital Corporatio­n wrote in a recent note that better trade demand and stronger domestic infrastruc­ture investment growth would drive China's recovery. The Beijingbas­ed investment bank's analysts said they expect economic momentum to continue after a strong rebound in industrial production growth in November.

There are other positive signs on the horizon as well, Wu said, citing the USChina "phase one" trade deal due to be signed on January 15.

A recent JP Morgan report said a recovery in trade is likely to help growth in 2020 -- although this also depends on further progress in the trade talks and how quickly fiscal support can step up to support infrastruc­ture investment.

ANZ senior China economist Betty Wang warned trade tensions could still escalate and impact next year's growth.

"The implementa­tion of the phase one deal this year could also create a lot of uncertaint­ies," she told AFP.

And China's growth may not have hit the bottom yet, according to Nomura analysts, given challenges such as worsening fiscal conditions, a cooling property sector and weakening exports.

Nomura's Wang Lisheng told AFP that despite the ongoing trade talks, China's export growth is likely to remain under pressure in coming quarters, given existing US tariffs on and global economic headwinds.

Beijing may respond with another round of infrastruc­ture stimulus, likely to focus more on large cities in the coastal regions, Nomura analysts said.

The World Bank has forecast China's growth to come in at 5.9 percent this year, against the backdrop of a "fragile" world economic outlook.

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