The Manila Times

China’s economy feels Covid’s sting

BEIJING: China on Friday announced it would cut a key interest rate as the country fiGHTS TO BOOST ITS VIRUS-HIT ECONOMY AND COVID-19 RESTRICTIO­NS RIP ACROSS MAJOR CITIES.

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Prolonged virus lockdowns have constricte­d supply chains, quelled demand and stalled manufactur­ing in the last major economy welded to a “zero-Covid” approach to the pandemic.

“The five-year loan prime rate (LPR) is 4.45 percent,” China’s central bank said on Friday, lowering the rate — on which many lenders base their mortgage rates — from the previous 4.6 percent.

The one-year loan prime rate, which guides how much interest commercial banks charge to corporate borrowers, remained unchanged at 3.7 percent.

The reduction in the mortgage reference rate comes as a wave of defaults ripples through the country’s real estate sector, with developers sagging under massive debts and struggling with a slump in demand.

Sunac, one of China’s largest developers to default on payments in recent months, said last week that sales in major cities had fallen dramatical­ly in March and April due to the coronaviru­s wave.

Economic data this week highlighte­d the stark impact of Covid-19 restrictio­ns and lockdowns in many major Chinese cities.

Figures on Monday showed retail sales and factory output last month slumped the most since the start of the pandemic, while unemployme­nt edged back toward its February 2020 peak.

Beijing’s unrelentin­g approach to Covid-19 outbreaks has snarled supply chains and locked down tens of millions of people, hitting major financial, industrial and tourist hubs.

Borders remain closed to most foreigners and a slew of internatio­nal sports events have been scrapped over pandemic concerns.

China’s premier Li Keqiang on Wednesday called for government department­s to “step up their sense of urgency” and said “new measures that can be used should be used” to prop up the world’s second-largest economy.

China has targeted full-year growth of around 5.5 percent, but data published in April showed that first-quarter growth slowed to 4.8 percent after its economy lost steam in the latter half of last year.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? INSIDIOUS ENEMY
A health worker waits for people to be tested for Covid-19 at a swab collection site in Beijing on Thursday, May 19, 2022. China on Friday announced it would cut a key interest rate as the country fights to boost its virus-hit economy, and Covid-19 restrictio­ns rip across major cities.
AFP PHOTO INSIDIOUS ENEMY A health worker waits for people to be tested for Covid-19 at a swab collection site in Beijing on Thursday, May 19, 2022. China on Friday announced it would cut a key interest rate as the country fights to boost its virus-hit economy, and Covid-19 restrictio­ns rip across major cities.

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