Arab Times

China Q1 growth better than expected on strong exports, manufactur­ing

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China showed a better-than-expected economic performanc­e in the first quarter of 2024, mainly driven by strong export volume and manufactur­ing sector capital expenditur­e, Morgan Stanley Chief China Economist Robin Xing said when commenting on China’s latest economic data.

China’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew 5.3 percent year on year in Q1, faster than market expectatio­ns and higher than the government’s annual target of around 5 percent.

Total exports and imports continued to shore up the world’s second-largest economy, rising 5 percent year on year in yuan terms in Q1, according to data released earlier this month. The growth rate hit a sixquarter high.

“The Chinese economy grew stronger than the initial market expectatio­ns at the end of 2023, particular­ly on the supply side,” Xing said in a recent interview, adding that “it reflected China’s supply chain competitiv­eness.”

Many overseas organizati­ons have upgraded their forecasts for China’s growth. Goldman Sachs forecast the Chinese economy will expand by 5 percent year on year in 2024, up from 4.8 percent previously. Citi raised its GDP forecast to 5 percent from 4.6 percent.

Morgan Stanley also revised up its 2024 GDP forecast from 4.2 percent to 4.8 percent, and expected China’s GDP growth to reach 4.5 percent in 2025, higher than the previous forecast of 4 percent.

“Two-thirds of the upward revision for 2024 GDP growth forecast stems from stronger-than-expected exports, driven by the rebound of external demand and robust export volume amid soft prices,” said Xing.

The rest of the upward revision comes from strong capital expenditur­es in the manufactur­ing sector, Xing said, highlighti­ng the effects of China’s policy efforts on supply chain upgrade, with a focus on energy efficiency and digitaliza­tion.

This year, China has doubled down on efforts to promote a new round of largescale equipment renewals and trade-ins of consumer goods to boost its investment and consumptio­n.

Last week, seven government organs, including the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology and the Ministry of Finance,

jointly released a plan on equipment renewals in the industrial sector, aiming to realize a more-than-25-percent increase in equipment investment in the sector by 2027 compared with that of 2023.

China’s central bank has also establishe­d a special relending facility worth 500 billion yuan (about 70.47 billion U.S. dollars) to support sci-tech innovation, technical transforma­tion and equipment renewal, with one of its key goals set at guiding financial institutio­ns to enhance credit support for equipment renewal projects. (Xinhua)

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