East Bay Times

Factories propel economy in China at beginning of the year

- By Keith Bradsher and Alexandra Stevenson

BEIJING >> The Chinese economy grew more than expected in the first three months of the year, new data shows, as China built more factories and exported huge amounts of goods to counter a severe real estate crisis and sluggish spending at home.

To stimulate growth, China, the world's secondlarg­est economy, turned to a familiar tactic: Investing heavily in its manufactur­ing sector, including a binge of new factories that have helped to propel sales around the world of solar panels, electric cars and other products.

But China's bet on exports has worried many foreign companies. They fear that a flood of Chinese shipments to distant markets may undermine their manufactur­ing industries and lead to layoffs.

Tuesday, China's National Bureau of Statistics said the economy grew 1.6% in the first quarter over the previous three months. When projected out for the entire year, the first-quarter data indicates that China's economy was growing at an annual rate of about 6.6%.

“The national economy made a good start,” said Sheng Laiyun, deputy director of the statistics bureau, while cautioning that “the foundation for stable and sound economic growth is not solid yet.”

Retail sales increased 4.7% compared with the first three months of last year and were particular­ly weak in March.

China needs robust consumer spending to bring down persistent­ly high youth unemployme­nt and to help companies and households cope with very high levels of debt.

Economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York warned last month that China is experienci­ng a “sugar high” of factory constructi­on fueled by heavy bank lending.

For the year, China has set a growth target of about 5%, a goal that many economists had viewed as ambitious, although some have recently upgraded their forecasts. Last year, China's economy grew 5.2%.

Output was 5.3% higher in the first three months of this year than during the same period last year, the statistics bureau announced Tuesday, exceeding economists' forecasts.

A breakneck pace of factory investment­s, up 9.9% from a year ago, was central to China's growth. Strong exports early this year also helped.

The value of exports rose 7% in January and February from a year earlier, and 10% when measured in China's currency. But the actual contributi­on from exports to the country's economy was considerab­ly greater, as falling prices obscured the full extent of China's export gains.

Guo Tingting, a vice minister of commerce, said the physical volume of exports had climbed 20% in January and February over last year. Exports faltered in March, however.

With street festivals and other activities, the government has encouraged families to spend more even as many in China have stepped up their savings to offset a nose-dive in the value of their apartments.

Domestic tourism spending and box office ticket sales rose during Lunar New Year in February, easily exceeding levels before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Broadly falling prices, a phenomenon that can become entrenched in deflation, continue to be a problem, particular­ly for exports and at the wholesale level. Chinese companies have been vying to cut export prices and win a bigger share of global markets, even when this means incurring heavy losses.

During top-level meetings this month with Chinese officials, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen warned that flooding markets with exports would disrupt supply chains and threaten industries and jobs. Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany expressed similar concerns while on a visit to China, though he also cautioned against protection­ism in Europe.

China is, meanwhile, experienci­ng a deep slump in housing constructi­on and apartment prices. The constructi­on of homes — and the production of steel, glass and other materials for them — was the biggest driver of growth in China for many years.

But sales of new apartments have fallen fairly steadily since the start of 2022. Few constructi­on projects are now being started as dozens of insolvent or nearly insolvent developers struggle to finish dwellings they have promised to buyers. Investment in real estate projects plunged 9.5% in the first quarter from a year earlier.

Chinese officials blame weaknesses in the Chinese economy partly on high overseas interest rates engineered by the Federal Reserve to combat inflation in the U.S. Those rates have made it more attractive for Chinese families and companies to move money out of China, where interest rates are low, to foreign countries.

“The negative impact of the high interest rate environmen­t on the economy is continuing,” said Liu Haoling, the president of the China Investment Corp., which is China's sovereign wealth fund. He spoke in late March at the China Developmen­t Forum, a meeting in Beijing of policymake­rs and executives.

Many Chinese households have borrowed to invest in apartments and are responding to falling home prices by cutting back their spending. That makes China more dependent on exports to sell its fast-rising industrial output.

“Chinese companies, across a wide range of sectors, now produce far more than domestic consumptio­n can absorb,” the Rhodium Group, a consulting firm, said in a report in late March.

People's wariness about spending is something Li Zhenya sees daily. He manages Izakaya Jiuben, a Japanese restaurant in the Beijing neighborho­od of Wangjing, once home to some of China's biggest tech companies.

A few years ago, workers lined up outside the restaurant, pouring out of nearby offices to spend their hard-earned money in short breaks between long shifts. These days, many of the restaurant's seats are empty at lunch and dinner.

“People's desire to consume is not that high now,” Li at Jiuben said. The restaurant, he said, pulls in about half of its sales from just a few years ago.

“I'm losing money at the restaurant,” he said.

A government crackdown starting in 2020 pushed companies to cull jobs. Others left Wangjing. COVID-19 restrictio­ns that froze the neighborho­od for weeks at a time made it hard for small businesses in Wangjing to recover.

“The epidemic led to a cautiousne­ss in consumptio­n,” said Kou Yueyuan, the owner of Smoon Bakery, down the street from Pano City. “Customers are price-sensitive.”

Kou now places less emphasis on developing new baked goods with different flavors. Instead, she focuses on keeping costs low so that the bakery can offer cheaper prices.

 ?? GILLES SABRIÉ — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A worker looks over electric cars from Zeekr, a new Chinese brand that is part of the Geely Group. China's big bet on exports has helped to counteract its housing slowdown, but other countries worry about a flood of Chinese goods.
GILLES SABRIÉ — THE NEW YORK TIMES A worker looks over electric cars from Zeekr, a new Chinese brand that is part of the Geely Group. China's big bet on exports has helped to counteract its housing slowdown, but other countries worry about a flood of Chinese goods.
 ?? QILAI SHEN — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Retail sales, such as clothing, in China have picked up, according to data from the beginning of the year.
QILAI SHEN — THE NEW YORK TIMES Retail sales, such as clothing, in China have picked up, according to data from the beginning of the year.

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