Arab Times

China official factory activity expands but job losses mount

Economists see initial stabilizat­ion signs, no quick recovery

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Activity in China’s manufactur­ing activity unexpected­ly expanded in March for the first time in nine months, an official survey showed on Friday, adding to hopes that downward pressure on the world’s second-largest economy is easing.

But while output rose and new orders from home and abroad returned to growth, factories still shed jobs at a significan­t rate, highlighti­ng the risks for leaders in Beijing as they try to cut industrial overcapaci­ty without sparking massive layoffs.

The official Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) rose to 50.2 in March, up from Feb- ruary’s 49 but still only marginally above the 50-point mark separating growth from contractio­n. The findings handily beat expectatio­ns for a further contractio­n.

Economists said a more than one-year blitz of stimulus measures may finally be showing some dividends, particular­ly steps to revive the ailing property market, with now surging home sales boosting demand for materials from cement to steel.

A government spending spree on infrastruc­ture, while slower to get going, now seems to be having a similar effect.

However, China watchers said more support will still be needed from Beijing and the central bank in the form of higher spending and interest rate cuts as the economy is likely to remain weak. Indeed, a similar private survey by Caixin and Markit, which focuses on smaller firms, showed manufactur­ing activity shrank again in March, though at the slowest pace in 13 months.

“The output and new order categories rose above the neutral 50-point level, indicating that the stimulus policies the government has implemente­d have begun to take hold,” noted Caixin chief economist He Fan. “However, considerin­g current conditions remain uncertain, the government needs to continue with moderate stimulus measures to reinforce market confidence.”

The private Caixin/Markit Manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ index (PMI) found that output, total new orders and output prices all returned to growth for the first time in well over half a year.

“It does seem to indicate manufactur­ing is warming up a bit, new orders were...a very strong figure,” said Raymond Yeung, senior economist at ANZ in Hong Kong.

Recovery

“We think there are basically two factors driving the recovery: the first is a possible accelerati­on in infrastruc­ture spending; the second is a broader pickup in external demand.” Yeung said China’s economy could grow 6.5 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier, cooling from 6.8 percent in the fourth quarter but better than many had expected just a month or two ago. Firstquart­er data is due on April 15.

Both the official and private factory readings showed manufactur­ers continued to shed jobs last month, but disagreed on whether on whether layoffs were moderating. The official survey suggested the rate of job losses may be slowly easing, with the reading at the highest since June, but the Caixin survey showed manufactur­ers shedding staff for the 29th straight month and at almost the same pace as in February.

Data from the recent China Beige Book quarterly survey showed firms cutting back sharply on hiring and wage hikes, risking a blow to domestic consumptio­n that could hamper any further recovery.

Sources have told Reuters that China is expecting to lay off 5-6 million state workers over the next two to three years as it tries to cut bloated industrial capacity and pollution, though officials say many of those can be retrained for jobs being created in the services sector.

Hopes that the long-suffering manufactur­ing sector may be bottoming out were fuelled by recent data which showed industrial profits rose 4.8 percent in the first two months of 2016 from a year earlier, ending seven months of decline.

China’s real estate investment rose 3 percent in the first two months of 2016 in year-on-year terms, quickening from an increase of just 1 percent in all of 2015, though a huge overhang of unsold homes could keep further market gains in check.

Global energy and commodity prices also have staged a limited recovery in recent weeks, which may have bolstered flagging profits at oil and mining firms and reduced strains on their balance sheets.

 ??  ?? A woman walks past an advertisem­ent in Beijing on April 1. China’s manufactur­ing activity expanded in March for the first
time in nine months, official data showed on April 1.
A woman walks past an advertisem­ent in Beijing on April 1. China’s manufactur­ing activity expanded in March for the first time in nine months, official data showed on April 1.

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