The Borneo Post

China’s economy grows 6.9 pct in first quarter

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BEIJING: China’s economy grew 6.9 per cent in the first quarter of 2017, government data showed Monday, beating expectatio­ns in the latest sign of stabilisat­ion for the world’s second-largest economy.

Beijing has said it wants to transition away from a reliance on debt-fuelled investment and towards a consumer- driven economic model, but the transition has proved bumpy.

The economy grew at just 6.7 per cent in 2016, its slowest rate in a quarter of a century.

“For the first time in the recent years, China starts a year with a strong headline gross domestic product (GDP),” Raymond Yeung of Australia & New Zealand Banking Group told Bloomberg News.

“Thanks to strong investment and property, the economy is performing well.”

The reading Monday marked the second quarterly improvemen­t since the final three months of 2014.

It was better than the median analyst expectatio­n of 6.8 per cent in an AFP poll, and also up on the fourth quarter figure.

“The national economy in the first quarter has maintained the momentum of steady and sound developmen­t,” the National Bureau of Statistics said in a statement.

It added that “positive changes

For the first time in the recent years, China starts a year with a strong headline gross domestic product (GDP).

kept emerging and major indicators performed better than expected”.

Monday’s data also showed China’s industrial output growth rose to 7.6 per cent year- on-year in March, beating a Bloomberg estimate of 6.3.

Retail spending rebounded to a forecast-beating 10.9 per cent, while fixed- asset investment rose 9.2 per cent in the first three months of the year, representi­ng a slight accelerati­on from February.

The readings follow data showing robust foreign trade and a further expansion in factory activity driven by a pickup in production and demand last month.

The faster growth rate was driven by a pick-up in industry and constructi­on, Brian Jackson of IHS Global Insight said in a note, adding that “mining, manufactur­ing and utilities growth all accelerate­d”, while the services sector slowed.

But the return to stimulus spending and infrastruc­ture to drive the economy shows Beijing has reverted to “the same old” investment- driven growth model, Raymond Yeung and David Qu of ANZ Research wrote in a note.

They said the government’s announceme­nt last month that it would build a vast new economic zone in the relatively unprospero­us area of Xiong’an shows authoritie­s have a “tendency to rely on infrastruc­ture developmen­t to sustain growth”.

News of the Xiong’an zone, which is expected to eventually cover a vast area of some 2,000 square kilometres, set off a flurry of speculativ­e real- estate purchases in the area, which has been struggling economical­ly.

Cheap credit has meanwhile bolstered the constructi­on sector since last year, attracting savers and speculator­s who have fuelled housing prices in large cities and accelerate­d manufactur­ing activity.

But looking ahead, China’s growth momentum is not expected to last through the whole year, Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics said in a note.

“Our own measure of economic activity also points to a strong start to 2017, though we don’t expect the strength to be sustained,” he said.

“With the accelerati­on in credit

Raymond Yeung, Australia & New Zealand Banking Group

growth that helped drive the recent recovery now being reversed, we still expect the economy to begin slowing before long.”

Jackson said that a steady decelerati­on in the real estate sector should take hold from the second quarter, adding that it would “create an additional drag for both the services and constructi­on components of GDP”.

The government has trimmed its 2017 GDP growth target to “around 6.5 per cent”.

According to the AFP poll’s median full-year forecast, China’s GDP growth will fall to 6.6 per cent for the year. — AFP

 ??  ?? This file photo shows a constructi­on worker walking outside a building site in Beijing. China’s economy grew 6.9 per cent in the first quarter of 2017, government data showed on April 17, beating expectatio­ns in the latest sign of stabilisat­ion in the...
This file photo shows a constructi­on worker walking outside a building site in Beijing. China’s economy grew 6.9 per cent in the first quarter of 2017, government data showed on April 17, beating expectatio­ns in the latest sign of stabilisat­ion in the...

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