China Daily

Manufactur­ing sector presses ahead as work restarts quicken in May

- By ZHOU LANXU zhoulanxv@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s manufactur­ing sector expanded at the highest rate last month since the COVID-19 outbreak, as the rebound in production quickened, a private survey said on Monday.

The Caixin China General Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index returned into the expansion territory in May and stood at 50.7, the highest level in the last four months, said a report released by media group Caixin on Monday.

The index came in at 49.4 in April. A PMI reading above 50 indicates expansion, while one below reflects contractio­n.

The pickup in operating conditions was backed by the accelerati­on in production amid further work resumption, the report said, with the output expansion rate climbing at the fastest level in more than nine years.

Supply chains also stabilized in May, following disruption­s in prior months due to the restrictio­ns to contain the epidemic, the survey showed.

Confidence of the surveyed manufactur­ers — around 500 private and State-owned manufactur­ers — brightened in May as the domestic economic order gradually normalized while some overseas economies started to partially resume work. The sub-gauge for future output expectatio­ns rebounded markedly to the same level as before the coronaviru­s outThe break, according to the report.

To sustain the recovery in the manufactur­ing sector, economists said there is a pressing need to expedite the rebound in domestic demand amid mounting external uncertaint­ies, ranging from the pandemic situation to geopolitic­al and trade tensions.

“Production continued its expansion while demand had yet to recover,” said Wang Zhe, senior economist at Caixin Insight Group. “Sluggish exports remained a big drag on demand as the virus continued spreading overseas.”

The subindex for new export orders reported a sharp contractio­n last month, while that for total new orders remained in the contractio­n territory despite rising slightly from the previous month.

official PMI for May, which edged down to 50.6, also indicated that sluggish exports have put pressure on total demand, posing challenges to future economic recovery.

The subindex of new export orders came in at 35.3, lower than the 50.9 of total new orders, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Sunday.

“The contractio­n in the external demand will probably linger amid the complex global pandemic and economic situation, making stronger policies to expand domestic demand essential,” said Wu Chaoming, chief economist with Chasing Securities.

The central government rolled out a proactive fiscal policy package at the annual national legislativ­e session, with bulk of the funds earmarked for boosting people’s incomes and consumptio­n, while the rest is to support infrastruc­ture investment.

“With the policies to expand domestic demand taking effect, the manufactur­ing sector, generally speaking, is expected to continue its expansion in the second half of the year,” Wu said, adding that fluctuatio­ns in PMI readings may still be inevitable due to protracted uncertaint­ies.

The Caixin report also indicated that the policies to stabilize employment should be implemente­d in full swing, as the employment subindex has remained in the contractio­n territory for five months in a row.

The contractio­n in the external demand will probably linger amid the complex global pandemic and economic situation, making stronger policies to expand domestic demand essential.” Wu Chaoming, chief economist with Chasing Securities

 ?? WANG JILIN / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Employees work at an auto manufactur­ing plant in Qingzhou, Shandong province.
WANG JILIN / FOR CHINA DAILY Employees work at an auto manufactur­ing plant in Qingzhou, Shandong province.

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