Kuwait Times

China’s economic recovery speeds up in third quarter

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BEIJING: China’s economy powered ahead in the third quarter, data showed yesterday, building on a strong recovery from painful coronaviru­s lockdowns, while the country’s crucial army of consumers picked up their spending last month as they grow more confident.

However, the expansion fell short of forecasts and officials warned of uncertaint­y as the disease continues to ravage other key markets, with the National Bureau of Statistics saying “the internatio­nal environmen­t is still complicate­d”. Having essentiall­y shut down major cities around the country to fight the virus, China’s economy saw an unpreceden­ted contractio­n in the first three months of the year but with new infection rates being brought under control it has seen a strong recovery over the past six months.

That has put it on track to be the only major economy likely to expand this year, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund said. The 4.9 percent growth in July-September followed a 3.2 percent rate in the previous three months, and is close to pre-pandemic levels.

The reading was helped by a forecast-beating 3.3 percent jump in retail sales last month, suggesting China’s army of consumers are returning to shops and restaurant­s, and travelling again. Industrial output also beat expectatio­ns, jumping 6.9 percent on-year in September. China’s communist leadership has hailed its handling of the virus, giving experiment­al vaccines to hundreds of thousands of people as it seeks to reframe the pandemic’s origin story.

But long-term fears over jobs and a potential virus rebound in China are weighing on consumer sentiment, despite government attempts to reignite domestic demand. Consumer caution -

“China built its quick recovery via stringent lockdowns, massive testing, population tracking and fiscal stimulus,” Nomura chief China economist Lu Ting said. Other factors such as export growth and a surge in demand after massive floods in the summer also boosted activity in September, he added.

But “China is not absolutely free from the risk of a second wave of Covid-19, pent-up demand will likely lose some steam... and rising US-China tensions could dent China’s exports and manufactur­ing investment”, Lu said. OCBC Bank’s head of Greater China research Tommy Xie told AFP that retail figures showed a positive trend, suggesting “rising interest in big ticket items”, with car sales a key driver of the spending rebound.

“But it will take some time for us to access how sustainabl­e this domestic demand is,” he cautioned, citing that tourism revenues from domestic trips were still down by about 30 percent on-year in the early-October Golden Week period. “That will also be particular­ly important for the upcoming growth, given China is now promoting a... strategy where domestic demand becomes increasing­ly important,” he said, referring to China’s push to make consumers the key driver of economic growth.—Reuters

 ??  ?? BEIJING: A woman wearing a face mask uses her mobile phone at the entrance of Auchan supermarke­t in Beijing.—
BEIJING: A woman wearing a face mask uses her mobile phone at the entrance of Auchan supermarke­t in Beijing.—

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