Sentinel & Enterprise

Chinese manufactur­ing weakens amid outbreak

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Chinese manufactur­ing contracted for a third consecutiv­e month in December, in the biggest drop since early 2020, as the country battles a nationwide COVID-19 surge after suddenly easing antiepidem­ic measures.

A monthly purchasing managers’ index declined to 47.0 from 48.0 in November, according to data released from the National Bureau of Statistics on Saturday. Numbers below 50 indicate a contractio­n in activity.

The contractio­n was the biggest since February 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic had just started.

The weakening comes as China earlier this month abruptly relaxed COVID-19 restrictio­ns after years of attempts to stamp out the virus. The country of 1.4 billion is now facing a nationwide outbreak and authoritie­s have stopped publishing a daily tally of COVID-19 infections.

Several other sub- indexes, including for large enterprise­s, production and demand in the manufactur­ing market also dropped compared to November.

“Some surveyed companies reported that due to the impact of the epidemic, the logistics and transporta­tion manpower was insufficie­nt, and delivery

time had been extended,” said Zhao Qinghe, a senior economist at the statistics bureau in a published analysis of the December data.

According to data from the bureau, sectors includ

ing constructi­on saw expansion in December together with sub-indexes that measure industries such as air transport, telecommun­ications, and monetary and financial services.

The purchasing managers’ index for China’s nonmanufac­turing sector also fell to 41.6 in December, down from 46.7 in November.

China is likely to miss

its goal of 5.5% economic growth this year, with forecaster­s cutting their outlook to as low as 3% in annual growth, which would be the second weakest since at least the 1980s.

 ?? ANDY WONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Shoppers walk through a reopened shopping mall after authoritie­s started easing some of the anti-virus controls in Beijing on Dec. 6, 2022. Chinese manufactur­ing weakened for a third consecutiv­e month in December, in the biggest drop since early 2020, as the country battles a nationwide COVID-19 surge after suddenly easing its anti-epidemic measures.
ANDY WONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Shoppers walk through a reopened shopping mall after authoritie­s started easing some of the anti-virus controls in Beijing on Dec. 6, 2022. Chinese manufactur­ing weakened for a third consecutiv­e month in December, in the biggest drop since early 2020, as the country battles a nationwide COVID-19 surge after suddenly easing its anti-epidemic measures.

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