The Guardian (USA)

China’s factory activity shrinks amid Covid disruption

- Graeme Wearden

China’s factory activity unexpected­ly shrank in July as sporadic Covid outbreaks disrupted the sector and the slowing global economy weighed on demand.

The official manufactur­ing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) fell to 49.0 in July from 50.2 in June, China’s National Bureau of Statistics said on Sunday. That was weaker than forecast, below the 50-point mark separating expansion from contractio­n.

Indexes tracking output and new orders fell during July, with the sharpest contractio­n in activity coming in energy-intensive industries, such as petrol, coking coal and ferrous metals.

“The level of economic prosperity in China has fallen; the foundation for recovery still needs consolidat­ion,” the NBS senior statistici­an Zhao Qinghe said.

China has been hit by fresh Covid-19 outbreaks since lifting a two-month lockdown in Shanghai at the start of June. It imposed a lockdown in the city of Xi’an at the start of July, after cases of the Omicron subvariant, known as BA.5, were detected.

Shenzhen, home to many tech companies, has vowed to “mobilise all resources” to curb a slowly spreading Covid outbreak, including strict implementa­tion of testing and temperatur­e checks, and lockdowns for Covidhit buildings.

The port city of Tianjin, which includes factories linked to Boeing and Volkswagen, has also been fighting clusters of Covid-19, and shut some entertainm­ent venues and kindergart­ens and tutoring agencies in July.

Weak demand has also constraine­d China’s recovery, with supply chain disruption and high energy prices weighing on the global economy.

Bruce Pang, the chief economist and head of research at Jones Lang LaSalle, said the fall in China’s manufactur­ing PMI showed that its economic recovery was fragile, after GDP fell in the second quarter of the year.

“The challenges to China’s GDP growth in the third quarter could be bigger than expected earlier,” Pang said.

China’s non-manufactur­ing PMI, which tracks the constructi­on and services sectors, decreased to 53.8 from 54.7 the previous month, showing slower growth in those parts of the economy.

China’s ruling Communist party effectivel­y acknowledg­ed last week that the economy will not hit its official 5.5% growth target this year. After a high-level leaders’ meeting, state media reported that China will try hard to achieve the best possible results for the economy this year.

 ?? ?? A worker polishes metal at a factory in Hangzhou, China. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
A worker polishes metal at a factory in Hangzhou, China. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images

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