Jamaica Gleaner

China factory output f lat, retail sales slip in July

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CHINA’S FACTORY output rose just under five per cent last month from a year earlier while retail sales fell slightly, suggesting the country’s recovery from the coronaviru­s pandemic remains muted.

The data reported on Friday show that despite a rebound in Chinese exports, domestic demand in the world’s second-largest economy is still lacklustre.

Massive flooding across much of the south of the country also has hurt both production and consumer demand, though it pushed food prices sharply higher. Pork prices jumped nearly 86 per cent, the report said.

Such “idiosyncra­sies” don’t fully account for the prolonged weakness in consumer spending, said Stephen Innes of AxiCorp.

“Still, the glaring concerns around retail demand continue to speak volumes that it’s going to take more than stimulus and deep discounts on luxury products to get people shopping again,” he said in a report.

The 4.8 per cent increase in industrial output from a year earlier was on a par with the month before and slightly below forecasts of just over 5 per cent.

China, where the pandemic began in December, was the first economy to start the struggle to revive normal business activity in March after declaring the virus under control. Manufactur­ing is recovering, but consumer spending is weak.

Many Chinese either lost their jobs or some income, or are worried they might.

The National Bureau of Statistics said that overall, China created 6.7 million jobs, nearly 2 million fewer than would normally be expected.

The trends show a “steady recovery,” said bureau spokespers­on Fu Linghui.

Still, there were signs of improvemen­t in investment in factories and constructi­on, which fell 1.6 per cent in January to July, compared with a 3.1 per cent contractio­n in the first half of the year.

Economists expect China’s economy to continue to recover in coming months as other economies also regain momentum lost during the pandemic.

RECOVERY PATH

“While household consumptio­n has been the laggard, we expect it to gather pace along with a gradual improvemen­t in the labour market “in the second half of the year, Oxford Economics said in a commentary.

It said exports would likely bounce back as well. “But the road ahead appears bumpy, as new export orders remain weak and the recovery path will be uneven across economies.“

Friday’s data release came just before Chinese and US officials are due to hold online talks about progress on a “phase one” trade agreement set in January that brought a truce in a tariff war between the two biggest economies.

Relations have worsened despite that deal, as the two sides spar over abuses in the northweste­rn region of Xinjiang, developmen­ts in Hong Kong and technology disputes, among other issues.

 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? An employee wearing a face mask to protect against coronaviru­s adjusts a sign advertisin­g a sale at a Sephora store in a shopping mall in Beijing on Friday, August 14, 2020.
AP PHOTOS An employee wearing a face mask to protect against coronaviru­s adjusts a sign advertisin­g a sale at a Sephora store in a shopping mall in Beijing on Friday, August 14, 2020.
 ??  ?? Shoppers wearing masks to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s visit a retail district in Beijing on July 22, 2020.
Shoppers wearing masks to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s visit a retail district in Beijing on July 22, 2020.

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