The Korea Times

Xi warms up China’s economy, but virus narrows options

Lockdowns imperil Beijing’s growth target of about 5.5 %

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BEIJING (AFP) — President Xi Jinping has offered state backing for tech, infrastruc­ture and jobs to revive China’s economy, but analysts warn growth will continue to wilt until Beijing drops its rigid virus controls.

Two and a half years since the coronaviru­s first emerged in Wuhan, China is the last major economy still closed off to the world, despite its relatively low death toll.

Lockdowns across dozens of cities — from the manufactur­ing hubs of Shenzhen and Shanghai to the breadbaske­t of Jilin — have wreaked havoc on supply chains over recent months, crushing small businesses and trapping consumers at home.

That has imperiled Beijing’s fullyear growth target of about 5.5 percent, with forecaster­s anticipati­ng that around one percentage point may be shaved off that figure.

“We remain deeply concerned about growth,” Nomura analysts said this week.

“We believe the Omicron variant and zero-COVID strategy represent the dominant challenges to growth stability.” Yet China’s Communist leadership insisted Thursday that the country will stick “unswerving­ly” to zero-COVID, with a meeting chaired by Xi declaring that “persistenc­e is victory.”

To curtail the growing economic damage, Beijing has offered words of respite to the tech sector from rolling regulatory crackdowns and promised to pump prime the economy with an “all-out” infrastruc­ture campaign.

But observers say rallies may be temporary as long as the state’s reflex remains to hammer down the virus caseload at all costs.

“(The measures are) all very welcome… but how many more bridges and how many more sports stadiums are going to help us in creating

an environmen­t of predictabl­e growth?” European Chamber president Joerg Wuttke told reporters on Thursday.

While many cities have bounced back after short, targeted lockdowns, other areas such as agricultur­al base Jilin province have been slow to recover from waves of restrictio­ns.

“That precedent (Jilin) could mean a longer-lasting impact from Shanghai’s highly disruptive lockdown,” said Ernan Cui of Gavekal Dragonomic­s in a report Friday.

Analysts are waiting for details of the delivery behind sweeping promises of support from Beijing’s policymake­rs.

China’s tech firms have been under the state’s microscope on concerns over data misuse and monopoly.

But shares of major tech firms soared as the government called for “healthy developmen­t” of the sector and shifted its language on completing its “rectificat­ion.”

It is unclear if that signals an end to a punishing round of regulatory scrutiny. Markets also cheered on as the government announced support for real estate and an infrastruc­ture push to buoy economic and social developmen­t.

But China “does not have much room for further infrastruc­ture building, (or) government borrowing on the local level,” said Dan Wang, chief economist at Hang Seng Bank China.

“In reality, there’s not much room to grow.”

While it harks back to Beijing’s four trillion yuan ($600 billion at today’s rates) stimulus package after the 2008 financial crisis — which included massive infrastruc­ture investment — Zhaopeng Xing of ANZ Research said “we doubt the authoritie­s will carry it forward at the cost of rising debts.”

China’s State Council has also said it would give cash handouts to jobless migrant workers and urged stronger support for small firms harried by lockdowns and shriveling consumer demand.

But re-inflating the economy is a big task made more complicate­d by each new level of virus control, experts say.

“Those easing measures, even on a large scale, may not achieve their intended impact due to lockdowns and logistics disruption­s,” Nomura added in its note.

A path of regular mass testing — which China appears to be embarking on — may also come with a hefty bill.

It would cost between 0.9 percent and 2.3 percent of GDP for a regular testing mandate to expand across China, according to Nomura.

 ?? AP-Yonhap ?? A man wearing a face mask to protect himself from the coronaviru­s rides a bicycle past a quiet road near the shuttered China World Trade Center, left, after a COVID-19 case was detected in the building in Beijing, Sunday.
AP-Yonhap A man wearing a face mask to protect himself from the coronaviru­s rides a bicycle past a quiet road near the shuttered China World Trade Center, left, after a COVID-19 case was detected in the building in Beijing, Sunday.

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