Millennium Post

Chinese economy takes Omicron hit, shrinks dramatical­ly in April

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BEIJING: Battling the worst Coronaviru­s outbreak since it emerged in Wuhan two years ago, China on Monday acknowledg­ed that its economy was hit by the Omicron variant leading to lockdowns of several cities as data showed the economy shrank dramatical­ly in April, with experts warning that the decline is yet to bottom out.

China, which prides itself on stamping out COVID-19 after it broke out at Wuhan in December 2019 before it became a pandemic causing havoc around the world with millions of deaths, struggled to deal with the Omicron Tsunami in the last few months resulting in lockdowns of several cities including its business hub Shanghai besides capital Beijing, which is currently under semi-lockdown.

Officials in Shanghai on Monday announced that they will gradually open up Shanghai, China’s largest city of over 25 million people, from June 1, ending a two-month lockdown which brought the business-industrial hub to a grinding halt.

Shanghai has cut off the community transmissi­on of COVID-19 in 15 out of its 16 districts, the local health commission said on Monday.

The city reported 69 confirmed locally transmitte­d COVID-19 cases and 869 local asymptomat­ic cases on Sunday.

From June 1 to mid-late June, Shanghai will fully restore the normal order of production and life across the city with standard epidemic prevention and control measures, while strictly preventing any resurgence of the epidemic, Zong Ming, Vice Mayor, told the media.

The city which witnessed vocal public protests over the handling of the crisis by the government reported 582 deaths since March with thousands of people treated in make-shift hospitals.

Meanwhile, Beijing, which is under semi-lockdown, began 3-day third round testing of its 21 million people on Monday as the city remained in semi-lockdown for the third week to break the chain of the virus.

The lockdowns were meanwhile impacting the Chinese economy which is reeling under the Ukraine war and trade tensions with the US and the EU.

China’s economy is expected to recover gradually as the country achieves major antiepidem­ic outcomes and progrowth policies take effect, Fu Linghui, spokespers­on for the National Bureau of Statistics said on Monday as the 2nd largest economy took a hit from the three-month-long run of the Omicron variant of the COVID shutting several cities.

The economy is expected to improve in May with the accelerati­ng resumption of work and production in Shanghai and Jilin as well as the implementa­tion of pro-growth measures, Fu was quoted as saying by the official media.

According to the official data, China’s April industrial production contracted by 2.9 per cent year-on-year, while retail sales were down 11.1 per cent, as the effects of Omicron flare-ups’ disruption­s on the economy further deteriorat­ed.

This led to calls for a finetuning of China’s coronaviru­s policies, especially the firmly imposed ZERO-COVID policy and increased stimulus have grown louder as the April data showed the economy shrank dramatical­ly.

Major indicators measuring China’s economy fell short of expectatio­ns with industrial production, retail sales, fixedasset investment and the surveyed jobless rate falling to their weakest levels in more than two years.

China’s economic activity contracted in April and was the most severe since the first quarter of 2020 during the first wave of the COVID outbreak, Tommy Wu, lead China economist at Oxford Economics said.

Wu expects a contractio­n in the second quarter before returning to growth in the second half of the year.

The risks to the outlook are tilted to the downside, as the effectiven­ess of policy stimulus will largely depend on the scale of future COVID outbreaks and lockdowns, he told the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post.

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