Bangkok Post

China’s export growth weakens in April as lockdowns bite

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BEIJING: China’s export growth slowed to single digits in April, the weakest in almost two years, while imports barely changed as tighter and wider Covid19 curbs halted factory production and crimped domestic demand, adding to wider economic woes.

Exports in dollar terms grew 3.9% in April from a year earlier, dropping sharply from the 14.7% growth reported in March although slightly better than analysts’ forecast of 3.2%. It was the slowest pace since June 2020.

Imports were broadly stable year-onyear, improving slightly from a 0.1% fall in March and a bit better than the 3% contractio­n tipped by the Reuters poll.

The weak figures show China’s trade sector, which accounts for about a third of gross domestic product, is losing momentum as lockdowns across the country ensnared supply chains in major centres like Shanghai, heightenin­g risks of a deeper slowdown in the world’s second-largest economy and beyond.

“The virus outbreaks in China led to huge difficulti­es in the production chains and the supply chains,” Chang Ran, a senior analyst at Zhixin Investment Research Institute said in a note. “Meanwhile, some countries in Southeast Asia have transition­ed from recovery to production expansion, replacing Chinese exports to some extent.”

Julian Evans-Pritchard, senior China economist at Capital Economics, said the main headwind to exports was weakening foreign demand.

“The sharpest falls were in shipments to the EU and US, where high inflation is weighing on real household incomes,” he said. “The declines were also especially pronounced in electronic­s exports which suggest a further unwinding of pandemic-linked demand for Chinese goods.”

Beijing’s extraordin­ary efforts to curb the country’s largest Covid-19 outbreaks in two years have clogged highways and ports, restricted activity in dozens of cities including Shanghai and forced companies from Apple supplier Foxconn to automakers

Toyota and Volkswagen to suspend some operations.

Factory activity was already contractin­g at a sharper pace in April, industry surveys showed, raising fears of a steep slowdown that could also hit global growth.

Shi Xinyu, a foreign trade manager in Yiwu, a commoditie­s trading hub, said only 20-50% of stores in the city are open due to Covid disruption­s.

“(The weak import demand came amid) the downward economic cycle and Covid hit,” he said. “Life is already hard enough and it happens we’ve got a leaky roof as it rains.”

Additional­ly, heightened risks from the Ukraine war, persistent­ly soft consumptio­n and a prolonged downturn in the property market are also weighing on growth, analysts say.

With the national jobless rate at a near two-year high, authoritie­s have promised more help to shore up confidence and ward off further job losses in a politicall­y sensitive year.

Some analysts even warn of rising recession risks, saying policymake­rs must provide more stimulus to reach an official 2022 growth target of about 5.5% if Beijing doesn’t ease its zeroCovid policy.

However, there are few signs of that happening. The country’s top leaders said last week they would stick with their zero-Covid policy, stoking worries of a sharper economic downturn.

Exports may have found some support from a weaker yuan , which suffered its worst month in April in nearly two years.

Zhiwei Zhang, chief economist at Pinpoint Asset Management, does not expect export growth to perk up in May as supply problems persist.

“The contractio­n of imports is a signal, as many firms’ imports of parts of components probably got disrupted,” he said in a note. “The resumption of production is quite slow at this stage.”

China posted a trade surplus of $51.12 billion in April. The country reported a $47.38 billion surplus in March.

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