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China industrial output slows sharply in July

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BEIJING: China’s industrial output, a key engine of growth, slowed sharply in July as government efforts to rein in debt weighed on demand and economic activity, official data showed on Monday.

The figures come as the authoritie­s have sought to tighten regulation­s to tame debt as well as reduce excess capacity left over from massive government-backed infrastruc­ture spending at the height of the global financial crisis.

Output by Chinese factories and workshops grew by a lower-thanexpect­ed 6.4 percent compared to the same month last year, the National Statistics Bureau said.

Economists surveyed by Bloomberg News had expected growth of 7.1 percent for July after industrial production expanded by 7.6 percent in June.

Retail sales, meanwhile, slowed slightly to 10.4 percent last month, compared to 11 percent in June, while fixed asset investment posted 8.3 percent growth in the JanuaryJul­y period — both slightly below expectatio­ns.

“In general, the national economy was generally steady in July with continued positive momentum and deepening structural reform,” national statistics bureau spokesman Mao Shengyong said at a news conference.

“But we also see that the internatio­nal circumstan­ce is still complicate­d and fluid, domestic structural conflicts still stand out, and there are still a lot of hidden concerns.”

Mao said industrial production was affected by the weather — high temperatur­es and floods — and efforts in some regions to speed up the reduction of excess capacity that does not meet environmen­tal rules.

Economic growth could slow by up to 0.2 percentage points in the second half of the year, Mao said.

While China has posted betterthan-expected second quarter growth of 6.9 percent, economic analysts have warned that the momentum will not last as authoritie­s clamp down on debt.

Property developmen­t investment eased between January and July, signaling that the government’s tightening policies “have finally trickled down through the economy,” according to ANZ Research in Hong Kong.

Julian Evans-Pritchard, a China economist at Capital Economics, said Monday’s figures provided “mixed signals” as growth in electricit­y and steel output accelerate­d while production of consumer goods and most other commoditie­s slowed.

“The upshot is that both foreign and domestic demand appear to have softened at the start of (the third quarter),” Evans-Pritchard said.

“A few sectors, such as steel, seem to have defied this slowdown in economic activity. But the strength in these areas likely will not last given that policy tightening is set to further weigh on infrastruc­ture and property investment in coming months,” he said.

But Betty Rui Wang, a senior China economist at ANZ, said the slowdown is likely to be temporary as the bad weather was partly to blame for July’s industrial output.

“We expect a rebound in the upcoming months,” she said.

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