Shanghai Daily

Services sector posts slower growth again

- PMI (Reuters)

GROWTH in China’s services sector weakened again in August as new business picked up only slightly from July’s more than two-year low, a private survey showed yesterday.

For August, the Caixin/ Markit services purchasing managers’ index fell to 51.5, the lowest in 10 months, from July’s 52.8. The 50mark separates growth from contractio­n.

Labor-intensive services industries are taking on a more crucial role for generating jobs as factories become more automated and rising costs in China push more manufactur­ers offshore.

The threat of fresh tariffs from Washington could also add to pressure on factory jobs, as US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion is set to decide on imposing duties on another US$200 billion of Chinese imports as early as this week.

Caixin’s weaker reading on the services sector followed a separate survey on Monday showing China’s manufactur­ing activity grew at the slowest pace in more than a year in August, with export orders shrinking for a fifth month and employers cutting more staff.

There were signs of rising upstream cost pressures in the services industry, yesterday’s survey showed, as input prices rose significan­tly faster than prices charged. Both were up from July.

Confidence in future business picked up from July’s near-record low, but remained well below the series average, the survey showed.

Growth in new business, which in July slowed to the weakest since December 2015, picked up only slightly last month.

Caixin’s composite PMI covering both the manufactur­ing and services sectors also declined in August, coming in at 52.0 from July’s 52.3.

The composite index indicates “that economic growth remained on a downward trajectory. Inflationa­ry pressures were pronounced as increases in both input prices and output prices accelerate­d,” said Zhengsheng Zhong, director of macroecono­mic analysis at CEBM Group, in a statement accompanyi­ng the survey.

With growth softening across China’s economy, policy-makers have stepped in to try to cushion the slowdown by pledging more infrastruc­ture spending and an increase in lending.

“August’s PMI readings indicated that the effects of expansiona­ry credit policy and active fiscal policy are yet to kick in. Signs of stagnation emerged as upward pressure on prices remained even though demand weakened at a faster rate,” Zhong said.

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