The Manila Times

China’s factory activity contracts anew

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BEIJING: China’s factory activity shrank for a second straight month in November, official data showed on Wednesday, as large swathes of the East Asian country were hit by coronaviru­s lockdowns and transport disruption­s.

The purchasing managers’ index (PMI) — a key gauge of manufactur­ing in the world’s secondbigg­est economy — slipped to 48.0 from October’s 49.2 and well below the 50-point mark separating growth from contractio­n, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

China is the last major economy welded to a “zero-Covid” strategy of eliminatin­g outbreaks with strict quarantine­s and mass testing, even as infections reached record highs this month, dragging down demand and business confidence.

“In November, impacted by multiple factors including the wide and frequent spread of domestic outbreaks, and the internatio­nal environmen­t becoming more complex and severe, China’s purchasing managers’ index fell,” NBS senior statistici­an Zhao Qinghe said in a statement.

November’s figure was lower than the 49.0 reading predicted by Bloomberg analysts.

The manufactur­ing PMI has been in contractio­n territory for all but four months of the year so far, as a summer of heat waves was bookended by Covid-19 lockdowns in major cities during the spring and autumn.

Zhao said domestic outbreaks in November caused “production activity to slow down and product orders to fall,” noting “increased fluctuatio­n in market expectatio­ns.”

Activity fell at businesses of all sizes during the month, with the PMI for small enterprise­s hit hardest at 45.6.

The nonmanufac­turing PMI came in at 46.7 points in November, also reflecting a contractio­n in activity and down from 48.7 points in October.

Zhao said that for transport, accommodat­ion, catering and entertainm­ent in particular, “the total industry business volume fell significan­tly,” as “some regions saw a relatively large impact from the pandemic.”

Chinese leaders have set an annual economic growth target of about 5.5 percent, but many observers think the country would struggle to hit it, despite announcing a better-than-expected 3.9-percent expansion in the third quarter.

Meanwhile, rare nationwide protests have erupted among a population exhausted by almost three years of zero-Covid, while authoritie­s have offered mixed messages on transition­ing away from the strategy.

“The virus situation continues to cloud the economic outlook,” Sheana Yue, China economist at Capital Economics, said in a note on Wednesday.

“Most cities have taken to implementi­ng localized lockdowns, similar to the ones we saw in April, which will continue to weigh heavily on services activity,” she added.

Yue warned that “there is little upside that might offset the weakness,” with a global downturn putting pressure on export-focused businesses in China.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? Employees work on an assembly line producing speakers at a factory in the city of Fuyang city, Anhui province, eastern China on Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2022.
AFP PHOTO Employees work on an assembly line producing speakers at a factory in the city of Fuyang city, Anhui province, eastern China on Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2022.

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