Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

China GDP grows record 18.3% in first quarter in virus rebound

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China’s economy expanded at a record pace in the first quarter as the country continued its rapid recovery from last year’s pandemic-fuelled slump, official data showed yesterday.

The 18.3 percent explosion in gross domestic product was the fastest pace since quarterly records began three decades ago but came off a historic contractio­n in 2020 during the depths of the pandemic.

It was also slightly short of forecasts in an AFP survey of economists.

While the disease first emerged in central China in late 2019, the country was also the quickest to bounce back after authoritie­s imposed strict control measures and consumers stayed home.

“The national economy made a good start,” National Bureau of Statistics spokeswoma­n Liu Aihua told reporters yesterday.

The sharp spike was partly due to “incomparab­le factors such as the low base figure of last year and increase of working days due to staff staying put during the Lunar New Year” holiday, said Liu.

Migrant workers were urged to remain in the areas where they work during the break owing to fears that the annual massive migration might lead to local outbreaks.

In a sign that the country’s crucial consumer sector is getting back up to pace, the figures showed retail sales surged in March, bringing first-quarter growth to 33.9 percent as life largely returned to normal.

Industrial output rose a less-than-estimated 24.5 percent in the quarter.

The figures come days after officials announced that exports -- and particular­ly imports -- had rocketed in March.

Liu, however, warned that the internatio­nal landscape still contained “high uncertaint­ies”.

While vaccines are being rolled out around the world, the distributi­on is uneven and a pick-up in infections is forcing government­s to reimpose containmen­t measures, holding back recovery.

The urban unemployme­nt rate, a figure analysts have been closely watching, ticked down slightly to 5.3 percent.

But economists expect growth drivers could change in the months ahead and have warned of an “uneven” recovery so far.

“Industrial production has been taking the lead in recovery last year, and it looks a bit tired now,” said UOB economist Ho Woei Chen.

“There is expectatio­n that with retail sales’ outperform­ance and a recovering job market, that there is momentum picking up in private consumptio­n,” she told AFP, adding that this should take over the lead in growth later in the year.

But Oxford Economics’ head of Asia economics Louis Kuijs cautioned that “a full rebound in household spending hinges on convincing vaccinatio­n and further improvemen­ts in labour market conditions”.

Beijing has been working to reposition its economy from a coal-powered manufactur­ing base to one powered by high-tech green energy and domestic consumptio­n.

But the country’s strong post-pandemic recovery has been powered by coal, with a raft of new plans approved and environmen­talists are concerned this could stem the shift towards greener policies.

A report from analysis company Transition­zero on Thursday said China needed to “cancel all new coal immediatel­y and indefinite­ly” and convert almost all of its coal fleet by 2040 in order to meet the zero-emissions target.

The economic data comes as US climate envoy John Kerry is in Shanghai for talks and ahead of a Franco-german virtual climate summit yesterday in which President Xi Jinping is set to take part.

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