Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China’s economic growth pace slows

U.S. trade dispute seen as taking toll

- COMPILED BY DEMOCRAT-GAZETTE STAFF FROM WIRE REPORTS

BEIJING — China’s growth fell to its slowest pace in more than 25 years in the quarter that ended in June, officials said Monday, as a resurgence of trade tensions with the United States and lingering financial problems take an increasing toll on one of the world’s most vital economic engines.

The world’s second-largest economy grew 6.2% over a year ago, down from the previous quarter’s 6.4%, government data showed Monday. While such economic growth would be the envy of most of the world, it represente­d the slowest pace in China since the beginning of modern quarterly record-keeping in 1992.

Hopes for an early growth rebound faded after President Donald Trump raised tariffs on Chinese imports in May to turn up pressure on Beijing over the tactics it’s using to challenge American technologi­cal dominance. Now, economists say the slowdown might extend into next year.

Weaker Chinese activity carries global repercus

sions. China is the world’s second-biggest export market behind the United States. Countries that feed raw materials to Chinese factories — from Chilean copper to Indonesian coal — are especially vulnerable to decelerati­ng growth in China.

The proportion of South African output going to China, for instance, has shot up from 2% in the mid-2000s to 15% now, according to a study by the McKinsey Global Institute. Then there’s the Democratic Republic of Congo, which sends 45% of its exports to China, according to United Nations data cited in the McKinsey report. In addition, emerging-market countries are increasing­ly dependent on Chinese investment.

Among major economies, Australia sent 35% of its exports to China in April, Brazil 30% and South Korea 24%, according to the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics.

Besides hurting countries that export raw materials to Beijing, the Chinese slowdown could come back to squeeze American companies such as Procter & Gamble and General Motors that sell into the vast Chinese consumer market. Slowing demand in China could depress their revenue, earnings and stock market value, said Mary Lovely, a Syracuse University economist who studies trade.

“President Trump is probably happy that he’s starting to tank the Chinese economy,” Lovely said. “But it’s a case of ‘be careful what you wish for.’”

In a Twitter message Monday, Trump said that tariffs on Chinese goods “are having a major effect on companies wanting to leave China for non-tariffed countries.”

“Thousands of companies are leaving,” he said. “This is why China wants to make a deal with the U.S.”

IHS Markit foresees world economic growth slowing this year to 2.8% from 3.2% in 2018.

A decelerati­ng “China is certainly part of that,” said Sara Johnson, IHS’ executive director for global economics.

But the world faces other problems, too. For one thing, Trump’s tariffs on imports from a host of countries — and the retaliatio­n they have drawn from America’s trading partners — are crimping world trade and investment.

Manufactur­ers worldwide are also sitting on unsold stockpiles of goods, and growth will likely slow as they pare their inventorie­s, Johnson said.

Trump and President Xi Jinping agreed last month to resume negotiatio­ns in a fight that has battered both American and Chinese exporters. But economists warn that their truce is fragile because they still face the same array of disputes that caused talks to break down in May.

“The trade war is having a huge impact on the Chinese economy,” Edward Moya of Oanda Corp. said in a report. “As trade negotiatio­ns struggle for meaningful progress, we are probably not near the bottom for China’s economy.”

Chinese leaders have stepped up spending and bank lending to keep growth within this year’s official target range of 6% to 6.5% and avert politicall­y dangerous job losses. But they face an avalanche of unexpected­ly bad news, including plunging auto sales.

In the second half of the year, “the external environmen­t may still be more complicate­d,” said a government spokesman, Mao Shengyong, at a news conference.

Mao downplayed the effects of trade, saying China’s economy increasing­ly relies on consumptio­n.

In 2009, the National Bureau of Statistics reported growth of 6.1% for the first three months of that year. However, Dong said that later was revised up to 6.4%.

Jittery consumers are putting off major purchases, depressing demand for autos, home appliances and other goods.

“I don’t think the country’s economy is as good as it looks,” said Peng Tao, a 26-year-old delivery courier who said he makes $750-$870 a month.

“China has been surely hurt more in the trade war,” said Peng. “I am not very happy about job prospects because there just aren’t many opportunit­ies out there.”

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund and private-sector economists have cut this year’s Chinese growth forecast to as low as 6.2%, a further marked decline after last year’s three-decade low of 6.6%.

Growth in retail sales slowed to 8.4% in the first half of 2019, down 0.1 percentage point from the first quarter, the government reported. Growth in factory output decelerate­d to 6% in the first half, down 0.1 percentage point from the first quarter.

Auto sales, reported earlier, fell 7.8% in June, extending a yearlong contractio­n in the industry’s biggest market. Chinese exports to the United States fell 7.8% in June from a year ago.

Urban families the ruling Communist Party is counting on to help propel consumer-driven growth to offset weak trade are being squeezed by rising living costs and slower wage growth.

Qiu Wanli, who works for an insurance company in the northweste­rn region of Xinjiang, said her family has little left over each month after paying a mortgage and expenses for her 3- and 6-year-old daughters and two elderly relatives.

“The burden to support the family is fairly heavy,” said Qiu, 30. “We rarely travel and have no plans to because of financial conditions.”

The fight between the two biggest global traders has disrupted sales of goods from soybeans to medical equipment and rattled financial markets.

The biggest factor in the latest Chinese economic weakness is lackluster activity in constructi­on and industry, according to Julian Evans-Pritchard of Capital Economics. He said that was likely to worsen because a boom in real estate developmen­t is fading.

“Combined with increasing headwinds from U.S. tariffs and weaker global growth, we expect this to culminate in a further slowdown in economic growth over the coming year,” Evans-Pritchard said in a report.

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