Khaleej Times

Signs of life in China’s economy

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beijing/shanghai — China’s economy has shown signs of improvemen­t in the first two months of the year with little risk of a hard landing, senior Chinese officials said.

China’s macroecono­my stabilised in the beginning of 2017, Ning Jizhe, head of the National Bureau of Statistics, said at the sidelines of the annual legislatur­e meeting in Beijing on Sunday. Industrial output in January and February grew more than six per cent, and the services sector expanded over eight per cent, he said.

In combinatio­n with rising retail sales and fixed asset investment data, “these readings would suggest robust growth momentum continued in early 2017”, Bloomberg Intelligen­ce chief Asia economist Tom Orlik wrote in a recent note.

Ning’s remarks indicated that policy makers in the world’s second-largest economy are more upbeat as they set a 2017 growth target of about 6.5 per cent. Premier Li Keqiang had earlier warned of “graver” internal and external challenges in his work report to the gathering of the National People’s Congress, while stressing economic fundamenta­ls remain sound and systemic risk is under control.

Industrial activity also picked up, with electricit­y generation, power consumptio­n and rail volume all posting steady growth, according to Ning. The country’s campaign to cut overcapaci­ty also appears to be bearing fruit. The coal and steel industries reported negative growth and property inventorie­s in China’s third- and fourth-tier cities declined in the first two months, he said. A slew of China’s economic data is scheduled to be released tomorrow. — Bloomberg

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