Qatar Tribune

China’s growth outlook muddied by a plethora of uncertaint­ies

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China is a major source of uncertaint­y for the global growth outlook in 2022 and 202 . After a sudden collapse in demand and activity in Q1 2020, following the outbreak of Covid-19, China performed an impressive recovery from the pandemic. The positive momentum lasted from mid2020 to mid-2021. China at that time was the first and only large economy to present positive GDP growth in 2020, being ahead of other countries in the economic cycle by several quarters. While the strong performanc­e led to an early withdrawal of both fiscal and monetary stimulus, the government also started a comprehens­ive campaign to tighten regulation on the real estate and corporate sectors, dampening business sentiment and containing a more significan­t rebound in private investment­s.

As a result, the recovery in China slowed down significan­tly since Q2 2021. In light of this, Chinese policymake­rs started to gradually revert from policy tightening to policy easing in late 2021 and early 2022, aiming to create more breathing room to the private sector. This provided some support to the economy, as a significan­t pick up in investment­s boosted GDP growth to .8 in Q1 2022, the first quarter of accelerati­ng activity after the period of peak recovery from the first phase of the pandemic.

However, despite this positive performanc­e, there are clear signs that a sudden stop in momentum already started. In March 2022, a new wave of Covid-19 outbreaks led to a strong government response within the “Covid-zero” framework, i.e., strict lockdowns and social distancing measures that persist until new cases in affected areas are at lined. This has so far included short lockdowns in the Southern Province of Guangdong, the main manufactur­ing hub of the country, and a longer, very significan­t lockdown in Shanghai, the largest and wealthiest city in China.

Lockdowns are affecting hundreds of millions of people in China, with the economic effects already starting to emerge. The manufactur­ing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) of China, a survey-based indicator that measures whether several components of activity improved or deteriorat­ed versus the previous month, slid back to sub-50 levels in March. Traditiona­lly, an index reading of 50 serves as a threshold to separate contractio­nary (below 50) from expansiona­ry (above 50) changes in business conditions. In other words, higher frequency data is indicating that activity in China is not only decelerati­ng but is also contractin­g or running below normal levels. In contrast, activity is still comfortabl­y in expansiona­ry territory in all major peers, including the US, the Euro area or the emerging economies of Southeast Asia (ASEAN).

In our view, two factors maintain the uncertain outlook for growth in China moving forward.

First, China is still vulnerable to new Covid-19 outbreaks. In fact, local Covid-19 outbreaks are becoming more frequent as variants that are more contagious emerge amid a population that is less immunized. We expect the government to continue with its “Covid-zero” policy, deploying robust social distancing measures against local outbreaks. This will weigh on growth as activity will be halted around the locations where new Covid-19 cases concentrat­e.

Second, supply-chain constraint­s are likely to continue, on the back of Covid-19 disruption­s, low inventorie­s and still strong pent-up demand. Supply constraint­s include low inventory levels as well as bottleneck­s and other disruption­s in manufactur­ing output and transporta­tion infrastruc­ture, such as ports, containers, and logistic networks. We expect to see supply constraint­s ease only by mid- to late-202 , when Covid-19 should become less of a threat to Asia. Supply-chain constraint­s put a cap on China’s manufactur­ing growth for this year and next, creating negative spillovers to the global economy.

Despite the above mentioned challenges, the Chinese economy should be partially buffered by fresh new measures of monetary and fiscal support. In fact, in mid- to late-April, authoritie­s announced different economic packages, signalling to the public that policymake­rs will not tolerate a “hard landing” of the Chinese economy. The packages include liquidity injections, credit support to key sectors, subsidized loans, infrastruc­ture investment­s and other targeted measures.

All in all, more simulative policies are justified by China’s significan­t slowdown as well as the challenges posed by Covid-19 outbreaks and supply constraint­s. On balance, we expect to see a further decelerati­on in GDP growth in Q2 2022, before some stabilizat­ion takes place over the second half of the year. We project China’s GDP to grow by .5 in 2022 and 5 in 202 . Such subdued performanc­e, vis- -vis historical norms, will be less supportive to the global economy, making it more vulnerable to other negative shocks, such as the US policy tightening and the Russo-Ukrainian conict.

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