Business Standard

China’s economic activity in April collapses under Covid Zero policy

INDUSTRIAL OUTPUT FALLS 2.9% RETAIL SALES CONTRACT 11.1% YUAN NEARS 20-MTH LOW POWER OUTPUT DOWN 4.2%

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China’s economy is paying the price for the nation’s Covid Zero policy, with industrial output and consumer spending sliding to the worst levels since the pandemic began and analysts warning of no quick recovery.

Industrial output unexpected­ly fell 2.9 per cent in April from a year ago, while retail sales contracted 11.1 per cent in the period, weaker than a projected 6.6 per cent drop. The unemployme­nt rate climbed to 6.1 per cent and the youth jobless rate hit a record. Investors responded by selling everything from Chinese shares to US index futures and oil.

China’s economy has taken an enormous hit from the government’s stringent efforts to keep the virus at bay, with major cities like Shanghai locked down for several weeks and restrictio­ns in many other places cutting into spending, shutting factories and blocking supply chains.

The government has doubled down on its Covid Zero strategy, even though the high transmissi­bility of the omicron variant puts cities at greater risk of repeatedly locking down and reopening. The zero-tolerance approach has prompted criticism from businesses, fueled public frustratio­n and has put Beijing’s ambitious full-year growth target of around 5.5 per cent further out of reach.

China’s main financial newspapers on Monday published a six-month-old speech by President Xi Jinping on the need to preserve jobs and shore up growth, a sign of greater urgency to bolster the economy. The surge in joblessnes­s is of particular worry to the Communist Party ahead of a twice-a-decade leadership reshuffle later this year, when Xi is expected to secure a precedent-breaking third term.

“They prioritise­d zero-covid over economic growth in April, but they want both for the whole year,” said Larry Hu, head of China economics at Macquarie Group. “After all, zero-covid at the cost of surging unemployme­nt is a hard sell politicall­y, especially in such a year with significan­t political importance.”

Monday’s data suggests gross domestic product declined 0.68 per cent in April from a year ago, the first contractio­n since February 2020, according to estimates from Bloomberg Economics. Growth could weaken to below 2 per cent in the second quarter, according to UBS Group AG, while S&P Global Ratings predicted it could be as low as 0.5 per cent.

With Shanghai taking the first steps toward reopening by allowing some shops to gradually resume operations, there’s optimism that last month’s data could mark the worst of the slump. China’s benchmark CSI 300 stock index closed 0.8 per cent lower with healthcare and consumer staples shares being the worst performers. The onshore yuan weakened 0.1 per cent to 6.7957 per dollar as of 5:04 pm local time. Electricit­y generation fell 4.3 per cent in April from 2021.

Disruption­s in China, the world’s factory, are worsening the global growth outlook and complicati­ng the inflation picture. Supply chain snags have affected companies from Tesla to Apple while export growth slowed last month to the weakest pace since June 2020

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