New Straits Times

‘CHINA GROWTH SLOWS IN Q1’

Economy expected to have expanded 6.7pc in t JanuaryMar­ch period, down from 6.8pc in Q4 last year

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CHINA’S economy slowed slightly in the first quarter as the government battles debt and financial risk, with trade frictions with the United States threatenin­g to further hobble growth, said analysts surveyed by AFP.

The world’s second largest economy is expected to have grown 6.7 per cent in the JanuaryMar­ch period, down from 6.8 per cent in the fourth quarter of last year, according to the poll of 13 economists ahead of the release of official figures tomorrow.

Analysts link the decelerati­on to Beijing’s efforts to rein in the country’s massive debt pile and financial hazards, as well as a slowing property market.

Fears of a trade war with the US have also roiled markets in recent weeks, with Washington and Beijing exchanging warnings of titfor-tat tariffs on a significan­t portion of their bilateral trade.

But the tensions — stoked by US President Donald Trump’s threat last week to target an additional US$100 billion (RM388 billion) in Chinese goods — have yet to cause real harm to the economy, analysts say. “The trade tension has not impacted on gross domestic product (GDP) growth yet ... and the trade data is still robust,” said Ligang Liu, chief China economist at Citibank.

“If the tensions continue, China’s trade competitiv­eness may be undermined, weighing on GDP growth,” Liu added.

Trade data released by Beijing on Friday reinforced that message with China’s trade surplus with the US surging by a fifth in the first three months of the year.

There are also signs economic growth could come in above the 6.7 per cent forecast by AFP’s survey. The figure is above the government’s official target of around 6.5 per cent for this year.

“China will release its economic quarterly data which are even better than expected, that shows a good sign for this year,” central bank chief Yi Gang said on Thursday.

“The global outlook continues to improve,” Yi said at a Beijing forum on China’s massive Belt and Road trade infrastruc­ture initiative.

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Workers piling up sacks of soda ash at a port in Lianyungan­g. Fears of a trade war between China and the United States have roiled markets in recent weeks.
REUTERS PIC Workers piling up sacks of soda ash at a port in Lianyungan­g. Fears of a trade war between China and the United States have roiled markets in recent weeks.

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