Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

China’s economy sees improvemen­ts

- ZEN SOO

HONG KONG — China’s manufactur­ing and investment improved in the first two months of the year, while weakness in the property sector weighed on the economy, the National Bureau of Statistics said Monday.

The report said industrial output rose 7% from a year earlier in January-February, better than analysts had forecast. Spending on factories and equipment, known as fixed-asset investment­s, rose 4.2%.

The real estate sector remained sluggish, with investment in real estate falling 9% in January-February compared to the same period a year earlier.

The property market is “still in a state of adjustment and transition” but policies outlined at China’s annual legislativ­e session earlier this month will promote “stable and healthy developmen­t,” National Bureau of Statistics spokespers­on Liu Aihua told reporters.

During the National People’s Congress meetings, China’s leaders pledged to refine property sector policies, including increasing financing to developers and building more affordable housing.

The signs of strength followed various moves by authoritie­s to boost growth. The statistics bureau said retail sales climbed 5.5% and consumer prices rose for the first time since August. The consumer price index was up 0.7% in February after months of falling prices.

“Industrial production was a sizable beat, supported by strong exports in the month, while fixed assets investment­s on the other hand, were likely supported by a state-driven push early this year,” said Louise Loo of Oxford Economics in a note.

She said consumer spending was “buoyed temporaril­y” by spending related to the Lunar New Year holidays, the biggest festival of the year, and that without added government spending it would be difficult to keep up strong growth.

Beijing has set an economic growth target of about 5% for 2024, which experts say may be challengin­g to reach.

“We expect economic momentum to improve further in the near-term given the tailwind from policy stimulus. But this recovery may prove short-lived due to the economy’s underlying structural challenges,” said Zichun Huang, a China economist with Capital Economics.

The recovery of the world’s second-largest economy following the shocks of the pandemic has been hindered by various factors, one of the largest being a downturn in the real estate industry after authoritie­s moved to curb excess borrowing by property developers.

Huang said that the correction in property constructi­on is “still in its early stages.”

China usually releases economic data monthly, but data for the first two months of the year are combined to avoid distortion­s from the weeklong Lunar New Year holidays, when many businesses and factories are closed.

 ?? (AP/Chinatopix) ?? Workers produce car mats in a factory of car interior pieces in Yantai, east China’s Shandong province, in February.
(AP/Chinatopix) Workers produce car mats in a factory of car interior pieces in Yantai, east China’s Shandong province, in February.

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