Qatar Tribune

Hong Kong GDP falls more than expected as COVID curbs bite

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HONG Kong’s economy contracted last quarter for the first time in more than a year as local restrictio­ns to curb COVID-19 hit activity and China’s own omicron outbreak disrupted trade.

Gross domestic product fell 4 percent in the Januaryto-March period from a year earlier, according to advance estimates released by the government on Tuesday. The number Hong Kong’s first since the end of 2020 was far worse than a median estimate of a 1.3 percent contractio­n in a Bloomberg survey. It was also the biggest contractio­n since the third quarter of 2020.

The city faced “immense pressure” in the first quarter of 2022, a government spokespers­on was quoted as saying in a release from the Census and Statistics Department accompanyi­ng the data. The city’s fifth coronaviru­s wave, along with moderating global demand growth and “epidemicin­duced cross boundary transporta­tion disruption­s,” all dragged on the economy, the person said.

Ahead of the data, there were signs of deep economic damage in the first three months of the year, with retail sales collapsing more than 14 percent in February and exports plunging 8.9 percent in March. The city imposed strict social restrictio­ns during the quarter including a ban on dining-in after 6 pm and closing gyms and beauty salons to battle a coronaviru­s wave that killed thousands and infected more than 1 million people.

“This shows how private consumptio­n, retail sales and the pandemic in China have hit growth,” said Samuel Tse, an economist at DBS Group Holdings Ltd in Hong Kong. Tse had forecast a 1.2 percent contractio­n because of a low base of comparison with the first quarter of last year.

The Asian finance hub is now slowly starting to reopen, meaning the first-quarter slump could mark the low point in the growth cycle.

On Tuesday, the government accelerate­d reopening plans, and will on Thursday allow eight people to eat together, up from four previously, along with other easing measures. Two weeks later, dining-in hours will be extended from 10 p.m. until midnight, Chief Executive Carrie Lam said at a briefing.

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