China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Regional growth in Q1 seen as reason for optimism, experts say

- By OUYANG SHIJIA ouyangshij­ia@chinadaily.com.cn

First-quarter economic growth across various regions in China posted a steady start to the year, showcasing the resilience and potential of the economy despite headwinds from resurgent domestic COVID-19 cases and mounting uncertaint­ies, experts said on Tuesday.

Zhou Maohua, an analyst at China Everbright Bank, said the steady growth at the regional level in the first quarter suggests more balanced developmen­t, with central areas reporting the most robust performanc­e.

As of Tuesday, 28 provinces, autonomous regions and municipali­ties reported positive firstquart­er economic growth.

Among the 28 provincial-level regions, 21 outperform­ed China’s overall first-quarter 4.8 percent GDP growth, while six regions including Guangdong and Jiangsu provinces and Shanghai reported growth rates well below the national average for the three-month period. Beijing, however, reported the same growth rate as the national level.

Jiangxi province led the rankings with its first-quarter economy growing 6.9 percent on a yearly basis, followed by 6.7 percent in both Fujian and Hubei provinces.

Guangdong, Jiangsu and

Shandong provinces ranked the top 3 provinces in terms of GDP size. Guangdong’s GDP, severely impacted by the resurgence of domestic COVID-19 cases, expanded 3.3 percent in the first quarter to 2.85 trillion yuan ($440 billion).

Noticeably, 11 regions recorded GDPs of over 1 trillion yuan in the first quarter, up from eight during the same period a year prior.

Dong Xiaoyu, a senior expert at Zhongguanc­un Developmen­t Group, said the steady first-quarter growth at regional levels laid a solid foundation for stabilizin­g overall growth in 2022.

Dong, who is also a researcher at the Capital Institute of Science and Technology Developmen­t Strategy, said China’s second-quarter growth is likely to slow due to weakening economic activity in hard-hit regions such as Jilin province and Shanghai.

Dong said China could meet its annual growth target of around 5.5 percent if it is able to effectivel­y control the pandemic in May, and he said he expects more steps to support struggling smaller enterprise­s such as further tax and fee reductions.

While Fujian and Shanxi provinces met their annual growth targets in the first quarter, other regions witnessed a gap between their first-quarter growth and their targets.

Zhou from China Everbright Bank said downward pressure from rising domestic COVID-19 cases since March severely suppressed domestic demand.

He warned that China is facing challenges and difficulti­es from domestic COVID-19 cases, volatility in the energy market and uncertaint­ies in the external environmen­t, which may cloud the outlook over the short term.

However, Zhou believes that with the help of effective government measures to prevent and control the pandemic and ease pressures on enterprise­s, China is capable of maintainin­g steady growth for the whole year and the economy is likely to recover in May and June.

Chen Jia, a researcher at the Internatio­nal Monetary Institute of the Renmin University of China, said he expects the government to take a series of measures to stabilize overall growth, with a key focus on stabilizin­g expectatio­ns, continuing to reduce fees and taxes and introducin­g supportive policies for resuming work and production.

 ?? ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Employees work on the production line of a carmaker in Shanghai.
ZHU XINGXIN / CHINA DAILY Employees work on the production line of a carmaker in Shanghai.

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