Gulf Today

China’s services sector expands at fastest pace in three months

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BEIJING: Activity in China’s services sector expanded at the fastest pace in three months in August as new orders rose, prompting the biggest increase in hiring in over a year, a private survey showed on Wednesday.

Stronger job creation by services firms will be welcome news for Beijing, which is struggling to reverse a prolonged slump in the manufactur­ing sector, that has dragged economic growth to near 30-year lows.

The Caixin/markit services purchasing managers’ index (PMI) picked up to 52.1 last month, the highest since May, compared with July’s 51.6. The index has stayed above the 50-point that separates growth from contractio­n on a monthly basis since late 2005.

New business accelerate­d slightly to a fourmonth high, with companies citing improving underlying demand and a boost from new projects.

But a sub-index for export orders pulled back from July’s three-month high, possibly due to heightened Us-china trade tensions.

Washington began slapping 15% tariffs on a wide range of Chinese goods on Sunday - including footwear, smart watches and flatpanel television­s. Tariffs of 15% on cellphones, laptop computers, toys and clothing are to take effect on Dec. 15.

The private survey’s findings largely dovetailed with an official gauge last week, which also showed improving service sector conditions.

“China’s economy showed clear signs of a recovery in August, especially in the employment sector,” said Zhong Zhengsheng, Director of Macroecono­mic Analysis at CEBM Group, in a statement alongside the data.

There were signs that government growth boosting measures were gradually kicking in, Zhong said.

“However, the Sino-us trade conflict remained a drag, and business confidence remained depressed,” Zhong added.

While business optimism for the year ahead improved, the reading was still below levels seen in late 2017 and early 2018 before the two countries began imposing tit-for-tat tariffs.

“Still, there’s no need to be too pessimisti­c about China’s economy, with the launch of a series of policies to promote high-quality growth,” Zhong said.

So far, Beijing has relied on a combinatio­n of fiscal stimulus and monetary easing to cushion the broader economic slowdown, including hundreds of billions of dollars in infrastruc­ture spending and tax cuts for companies.

But those measures have been slow to trickle through the economy, and with U.S. trade pressure intensifyi­ng analysts believe a deeper downturn could be inevitable without further policy support.

China rolled out some consumptio­n-boosting measures last month, including the possible removal of curbs on auto purchases, though details were sketchy.

The services sector accounts for over half of China’s economy, providing an important buffer to mounting export pressures. But growth has been generally cooling over the past year as businesses and consumers grow more cautious on spending.

Caixin’s composite manufactur­ing and services PMI, also released on Wednesday, ticked up to a four-month high of 51.6 in August from 50.9 in July, though factory orders remained weak.

Meanwhile, China stocks closed higher on Wednesday, bolstered by a private survey showing an upbeat services sector and helped by sharp gains in Hong Kong following reports the government would formally withdraw the proposed extraditio­n bill.

The blue-chip CSI300 index rose 0.8%, to 3,886.00, while the Shanghai Composite Index ended up 0.9%, at 2,957.41.

 ?? Reuters ?? ↑ Customers at a currency exchange outlet in Shanghai.
Reuters ↑ Customers at a currency exchange outlet in Shanghai.

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