The Edge Singapore

China economy worse off in some ways than 2020, Premier Li says

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China’s economy is in some respects faring worse than in 2020 when the pandemic first emerged, Premier Li Keqiang said, urging efforts to reduce a soaring unemployme­nt rate.

“Economic indicators in China have fallen significan­tly, and difficulti­es in some aspects and to a certain extent are greater than when the epidemic hit us severely in 2020,” Li said on May 25, at an emergency meeting with thousands of representa­tives from local government­s, state-owned companies and financial firms on stabilisin­g the economy. China’s full-year growth in 2020 was 2.2%.

Li’s warnings add to expectatio­ns that Beijing may admit to missing its GDP target by a large margin this year as it keeps its focus on controllin­g Covid-19 infections through stringent controls. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg forecast gross domestic product will grow 4.5% this year, well below the government’s target of about 5.5%.

The premier called on officials to ensure unemployme­nt falls and the economy “operates in a reasonable range” in the second quarter of this year, state media cited him as saying. The nation’s surveyed jobless rate climbed to 6.1% in April, the highest since February 2020. Official data for April showed industrial output contractin­g for the first time since 2020.

“The economy is at its most grim moment since the second quarter of 2020,” says Bruce Pang, head of macro and strategy research at China Renaissanc­e Securities Hong Kong. “The meeting was not intended to announce more policy measures, but instead to strengthen the consensus, flesh out the details and urge the implementa­tion of policies to ensure all existing policies are taking effect.”

State media echoed Li’s plea on May 26 to boost growth. China has to take more strenuous effort to achieve this year’s economic growth target, and all work on stabilisin­g employment and helping small businesses needs to accelerate, the Economic Daily said in a commentary on May 26. The newspaper is affiliated with the State Council, China’s cabinet.

Li’s emphasis on growth in the second quarter may be an “implicit acknowledg­ment” that the growth target set in early March will be “challengin­g,” Goldman Sachs Group economists write in a note. “Chinese policy makers are in greater urgency to support the economy after the very weak activity growth in April, anaemic recovery month-to-date in May, and continued increases in unemployme­nt rates.” The meeting is the latest in a series of calls by Li to support growth, which has come under enormous pressure since March from Covid-19 outbreaks and President Xi Jinping’s commitment to Covid Zero, requiring strict restrictio­ns on activity where outbreaks occur. Li said that economic data for the second quarter would be released “accurately” — amid some suspicion that official data could be massaged to appear less bad.

The premier indicated that China will try to reduce the economic impact of its strict Covid-19 control policies, without specifying how that would be achieved. “At the same time as controllin­g the epidemic, we must complete the task of economic developmen­t,” he says.

High-frequency data showed the economy remained in a deep slump in May as lockdowns continued to weigh on activity, according to Bloomberg’s aggregate index of eight indicators.

Beijing has never admitted to missing its annual growth target by a large margin since it began setting such goals more than three decades ago, with only one narrow miss previously reported in 1998.

Li outlined 33 support measures on May 23 to help businesses, including more than 140 billion yuan ($28 billion) of additional tax reductions including one for vehicle purchases.

Local government­s were told to spend most of the proceeds from 3.65 trillion yuan of bonds used mainly for infrastruc­ture by the end of August. Li said more detailed instructio­ns on how to implement those policies would be issued this month.

The central bank and banking regulator also held a meeting with major financial institutio­ns on May 23 to urge them to boost loans. State media reported following the meeting that some banks had been handed specific quotas requiring them to accelerate loan growth.—

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