Manila Bulletin

China growth outlook darkens in 2016 – ADB

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BEIJING (AFP) – Huge industrial overcapaci­ty will drag on China's growth this year, the Asian Developmen­t Bank ( ADB) said Wednesday as it cut its forecast for the world's second-largest economy.

In 2016 China's GDP growth is expected to slow to 6.5 percent, the ADB said in its Asian Developmen­t Outlook, lower than its previous forecast of 6.7 percent in December and down from the 6.9 percent expansion posted last year.

The document comes at a time of global uncertaint­y about Beijing's ability to make much-needed cuts to its steel, coal, and cement sectors and manage a tough economic transition to a more consumer-led model.

''Weak external demand and excess capacity in some sectors, on top of a shrinking labor force and rising wages, continue to induce a gradual decline in the PRC's growth rate,'' ADB chief economist Shang- Jin Wei said.

A ''sharp slowdown'' in real-estate investment will be a ''drag'' on the economy, the bank added, although it would be partly offset by consumptio­n and green investment.

The ADB's forecast matches the low end of Beijing's 6.5-7 percent target for the year. The bank's China economics head Jurgen Conrad told reporters in Beijing that the government ''urgently needed'' to accelerate cuts to excess capacity in real-estate and manufactur­ing, while high corporate debt was another challenge.

''Supply-side reform is what China needs and what Asia needs,'' he said, adding that Beijing would not use ''shock therapy'' to carry out reforms.

Heavy industries, many of them state- owned, have provided mass employment for tens of millions of people in China, but are increasing­ly inefficien­t, loss-making and debt-ridden.

''What China is now attempting to do, in terms of the transforma­tion of the economy, is absolutely unpreceden­ted in human history,'' China country director Hamid Sharif said in Beijing.

''We know from the experience of other countries that reform is very much an art, and not a science.

''In every country, decisions have to be made taking into account what is possible, and what is achievable, rather than what some theoretica­l economist may sit in a room and decide ought to be done.''

Shutting down inefficien­t companies could cause further problems, leading to job losses of 3.6 million and drying up tax revenues for local government­s, the bank noted, suggesting a '' gradual approach'' to avoid the social unrest that Beijing abhors.

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