San Diego Union-Tribune

CHINA’S ECONOMY SHOWS STRONG RECOVERY AS COVID ZERO ERA ENDS

- BLOOMBERG NEWS

China’s economy is showing signs of a stronger rebound after COVID restrictio­ns were abandoned, with manufactur­ing posting its biggest improvemen­t in more than a decade, services activity climbing and the housing market stabilizin­g.

The manufactur­ing purchasing managers’ index rose to 52.6 last month, the National Bureau of Statistics said Wednesday, the highest reading since April 2012. A nonmanufac­turing gauge measuring activity in both the services and constructi­on sectors improved to 56.3. Both indexes beat economists’ expectatio­ns.

The PMIs provide the first comprehens­ive data of the economy’s recovery after COVID restrictio­ns were dropped late last year, infection waves began easing and businesses returned to normal after the Lunar New Year holidays. The figures add to other signs of a rebound in the economy and put policymake­rs in a good position ahead of next week’s National People’s Congress, where a

new growth target will be disclosed.

Although there were “significan­t seasonal and event factors” influencin­g the PMI figures, the “overall trend still points to a solid recovery at the beginning of 2023,” said Zhou Hao, chief econo

mist at Guotai Junan Internatio­nal. “The decent PMI readings provide a positive note for the upcoming National People’s Congress,” with the government expected to roll out further supportive policies to cement the recovery, he said.

While investors have focused Wednesday on the signs of recovery, the NPC next week is proving to be a source of uncertaint­y. President Xi Jinping is moving to consolidat­e the Communist Party’s hold over the world’s secondlarg­est economy, with plans for sweeping changes to China’s bureaucrac­y and more influence within private companies, including reforms for the financial sector.

Economists have also cautioned that even as the improving factory data suggests the recovery is becoming more balanced, there are still head winds, as global demand remains weak and exports will likely contract this year.

Other data has signaled a pickup in domestic demand. China’s home sales rose in February from a year earlier, the first such increase since June 2021 as policymake­rs expanded support for the sector.

Road congestion in major cities has increased, subway ridership has returned to pre-pandemic levels and restaurant and mall spending has risen.

 ?? QILAI SHEN BLOOMBERG ?? Workers at a garment factory in Guangzhou, China, amid a rebound in the country’s economy.
QILAI SHEN BLOOMBERG Workers at a garment factory in Guangzhou, China, amid a rebound in the country’s economy.

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