Arab News

Hong Kong confirms economy fell into recession amid protests

- Reuters Hong Kong

Hong Kong sank into recession for the first time in a decade in the third quarter, government data confirmed on

Friday, weighed down by increasing­ly violent antigovern­ment protests and the escalating US-China trade war.

The economy shrank by 3.2 percent in July-September from the previous quarter on a seasonally adjusted basis, revised government data showed, in line with a preliminar­y reading.

Gross domestic product (GDP) contracted for the second consecutiv­e quarter, meeting the technical definition of a recession.

With no end to the protests in sight, analysts warn that the financial and trading center potentiall­y faces a longer and deeper slump than during the global financial crisis in 2008/2009 and the SARS epidemic in 2003.

From a year earlier, the economy contracted 2.9 percent, also in line with the preliminar­y reading. The readings were the weakest since the global crisis.

“Domestic demand worsened significan­tly in the third quarter, as the local social incidents took a heavy toll on consumptio­nrelated activities and subdued economic prospects weighed on consumptio­n and investment sentiment,” the government said in a statement.

It revised down its forecast for full-year growth to a contractio­n of 1.3 percent versus an earlier estimate of 0-1 percent growth. That

ECONOMY

would mark the first annual decline since 2009. “Ending violence and restoring calm are pivotal to the recovery of the economy. The government will continue to closely monitor the situation and introduce measures as necessary to support enterprise­s and safeguard,” the government said.

More than five months of political protests have plunged the city into its worst crisis since it reverted from British to Chinese rule in 1997.

Tourists are canceling bookings, retailers are reeling from a sharp drop in sales and the stock market is faltering, adding to pressure the city is feeling from China’s economic slowdown and the prolonged Sino-US trade dispute. August retail sales were the worst on record — down 23 percent from a year earlier — while September’s plunged 18.3 percent.

Parts of the city were paralyzed for a fifth day on Friday. Transporta­tion disruption­s have become common and some shopping malls and other businesses are shuttering early as the unrest escalates.

Hong Kong is one of the world’s most important financial hubs with total banking, fund and wealth management assets worth more than $6 trillion.

Many businesses with ambitions to expand in China still consider it as a gateway into the mainland, while Chinese firms use it to access internatio­nal capital, as well as a testing ground and springboar­d for their global ambitions.

Business activity in the private sector fell to its weakest in 21 years in October, according to IHS Markit, while demand from mainland China declined at the sharpest pace in the survey’s history, which started in July 1998. The government has rolled out stimulus measures since August, but since it is forced to keep a high level of reserves to back the Hong Kong dollar peg to the US dollar, the packages have been relatively small. Analysts also doubt the effectiven­ess of handouts, since the uncertaint­y prevents businesses and consumers from spending and investing, and store closures will lead to job losses.

 ?? AP ?? Police in riot gear arrive at the scene of a protest in the financial district in Hong Kong on Friday. Violent anti-government protests and the escalating US-China trade war have hit the financial hub.
AP Police in riot gear arrive at the scene of a protest in the financial district in Hong Kong on Friday. Violent anti-government protests and the escalating US-China trade war have hit the financial hub.

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