Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China economy lags in November

Virus and supply woes compound weak retail, inflation

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BEIJING — China reported Wednesday that its economy slowed in November, buffeted by coronaviru­s outbreaks, weak demand and supply chain disruption­s.

Retail sales were weaker than in October and inflationa­ry pressures are complicati­ng efforts to boost growth at a time when tighter limits on borrowing by developers are crimping constructi­on and sales in the all-important property sector.

The Feb. 4-20 Beijing Winter Olympics will likely have “limited impact overall,” National Bureau of Statistics spokesman Fu Linghui told reporters, since pandemic restrictio­ns are limiting travel and other activities.

Fu said the global environmen­t was becoming “more complex and severe,” but China still expects to meet its economic targets for this year.

The new coronaviru­s was first reported from China and the ruling Communist Party has championed its success in containing the pandemic. Sporadic outbreaks and the emergence of new virus variants remain a constant challenge both for public health policies and the country’s economic recovery.

Concerns have been raised over the economic price paid for keeping the virus under control through repeated lockdowns and other strict measures, including limits on internatio­nal travel.

The economy grew at an unexpected­ly slow 4.9% annual pace in July-September, down from 7.9% in April-June.

In November, retail sales grew 3.9% from a year earlier, down from 4.% the month before. Industrial production picked up only slightly, growing 3.8% last month compared with 3.5% in October.

Leaders have promised tax

cuts and support for entreprene­urs after the campaign to rein in surging corporate debt caused bankruptci­es and defaults among real estate developers.

Investors are waiting to see what happens to Evergrande Group, a developer analysts say looks increasing­ly likely to default on $310 billion of debt. Smaller developers have defaulted on millions of dollars of debt or gone bankrupt.

Meanwhile, a crackdown on what regulators say is improper behavior by Chinese tech giants including Alibaba Group, the world’s biggest e-commerce platform, has prompted jittery investors to knock more than $1 trillion off their share prices abroad.

Fu appeared to brush aside such concerns.

“With the coordinati­on of pandemic prevention and control and economic and social developmen­t, as well as the effective implementa­tion of macro policy adjustment­s, the main goals of economic and social developmen­t for this year are expected to be achieved,” he said. “There is still strong support for the economy to overcome difficulti­es and remain stable next year.”

 ?? ?? Workers sew fabric Tuesday at a garment factory in Shenyang in northeaste­rn China’s Liaoning province. (AP/Chinatopix)
Workers sew fabric Tuesday at a garment factory in Shenyang in northeaste­rn China’s Liaoning province. (AP/Chinatopix)

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