The Sun (Malaysia)

China’s March factory activity expands

o Positive sign for policymake­rs seeking to revive world’s second largest economy

- SHENZHEN:

China’s manufactur­ing activity expanded for the first time in six months in March, an official factory survey showed yesterday, offering relief to policymake­rs even as a crisis in the property sector remains a drag on the economy and confidence.

The official purchasing managers’ index (PMI) rose to 50.8 in March from 49.1 in February, above the 50-mark separating growth from contractio­n and topping a median forecast of 49.9 in a Reuters poll.

Though the pace of growth was modest, it was also the highest PMI reading since March of last year, when momentum from the lifting of tough Covid-19 restrictio­ns began to stall.

“From the indicators, domestic supply and demand has improved, while homeowner and business confidence is recovering, while willingnes­s to consume and invest are increasing,” said Zhou Maohua, an analyst with China Everbright Bank.

New export orders rose into positive territory, breaking a 11-month slump, but employment continued to shrink, albeit at a slower rate, the PMI data showed.

Recent upbeat indicators suggest the world’s second-largest economy is slowly getting back on better footing, leading analysts to start upgrading their growth forecasts for the year.

Policymake­rs have wrestled with persistent economic sluggishne­ss since the abandonmen­t of Covid curbs in late 2022, amid a deepening housing crisis, mounting local government debts and weakening global demand.

“March data show the economy is poised for a strong end to Q1,” China Beige Book, an advisory firm, said in a note last week.

“Hiring recorded its longest stretch of improvemen­t since late 2020. Manufactur­ing picked up, as did retail.”

However, a deep slump in the Asian giant’s property sector remains a major drag on growth, testing the health of heavily indebted local government­s and state-owned banks’ balance sheets.

The official non-manufactur­ing PMI, which includes services and constructi­on, rose to 53 from 51.4 in February, marking the highest reading since September.

Premier Li Qiang announced an ambitious 2024 economic growth target of around 5% earlier this month at the annual meeting of the National People’s Congress, China’s rubber-stamp Parliament.

But analysts say policymake­rs will need to roll out more stimulus to hit that target as they will not be able to count on the low statistica­l base of 2022 which flattered 2023 growth data.

Citi last week raised its economic growth forecast for China for this year to 5% from 4.6%, citing “recent positive data and policy delivery”.

China’s Cabinet on March 1 approved a plan aimed at promoting large-scale equipment upgrades and sales of consumer goods.

The head of the country’s state planner told a news conference earlier this month the plan could generate market demand of over five trillion yuan (RM3.2 trillion) annually.

Many analysts worry that China may begin flirting with Japan-style stagnation later this decade unless policymake­rs take steps to reorient the economy towards household consumptio­n and market-allocation of resources, and away from the heavy reliance on infrastruc­ture investment­s seen in the past.

 ?? AFPPIC ?? Employees working at a factory that produces LED displays in the eastern China city of Huaian. –
AFPPIC Employees working at a factory that produces LED displays in the eastern China city of Huaian. –

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