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Business News/ News / World/  Two-speed China growth intact as factories, services diverge
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Two-speed China growth intact as factories, services diverge

The official China PMI edged up to 49.7 last month from a three-year low of 49.6 in November

Photo: BloombergPremium
Photo: Bloomberg

Beijing: China’s economic rebalancing remained intact as the first economic reports of 2016 signalled manufacturing weakened for a fifth straight month, the longest such streak since 2009, even as a gauge of services rose to the highest level in more than a year.

The official purchasing managers index (PMI) edged up to 49.7 last month from a three-year low of 49.6 in November, the National Bureau of Statistics said on Friday. That compared with a median estimate of 49.8 in a Bloomberg survey of economists. The non-manufacturing PMI rose to 54.4, the highest since August 2014. Numbers below 50 indicate deterioration.

“The readings still signal a two-speed economy, with manufacturing momentum moderating, notably in the key export sector, while the services economy strengthened," said Rajiv Biswas, the Asia-Pacific chief economist at IHS Global Insight in Singapore. Excess heavy manufacturing capacity, including steel and shipbuilding, will likely “keep Chinese manufacturing sector growth momentum constrained in 2016."

Policy makers looking ahead to the new year are faced with old economic drivers that still aren’t showing any signs of a pick-up even amid fresh indications of strength in the new ones, despite six People’s Bank of China interest-rate cuts and stepped up fiscal stimulus. The sweeping shift of the world’s second-largest economy is a long-sought transition away from investment and manufacturing toward consumption and services.

Another survey-based factory report released Monday indicated deterioration below the key 50 level. The private Caixin China Manufacturing PMI index decreased to 48.2 last month, down from a five-month high of 48.6 in November. That compared with a median estimate of 48.9 in a Bloomberg survey of economists.

While the official manufacturing PMI showed improvement on both the supply and demand sides, downward pressure remains significant, the statistics bureau said in a statement released with Friday’s data. Some manufacturers’ operations were affected by declining crude oil prices, continuous drops in the wholesale and raw material purchase price indexes, as well as tightening liquidity at the end of the year, according to the NBS.

The increase in December lifted the manufacturing gauge from the lowest level since August 2012 and brought the average reading for 2015 to 49.9, which is below the 50.7 average for the past five years. Last year’s PMI high of 50.2 in May and June was about the same as the lowest levels of 2013 and 2014.

“The improvement in the index suggests growth momentum has continued to stabilize, in part due to the government’s stimulus efforts," Fielding Chen, an economist at Bloomberg Intelligence in Hong Kong, wrote in a note. “Nevertheless, another reading below the 50 threshold that separates expansion and contraction suggests the economy stays broadly weak."

The stabilization suggests that while the government likely achieved its 2015 growth target, the economy faces “substantial downside risks," and top officials have already signalled their intention to implement more accommodative policies in 2016, Chen said.

Some manufacturing sub-gauges showed positive signs. Output rose to 52.2 from 51.9 in the prior month, while new orders were 50.2, up from 49.8 in November, the NBS said. On the services side, Friday’s PMI release showed new orders climbed to 51.7, the highest since May 2014, from 50.2. Employment picked up, as did a gauge of prices charged.

China’s leaders say 2015 growth can meet their target of about 7 percent, and they signaled after a key planning conference last month they’ll do more to prevent a sharp slowdown, including widening the fiscal deficit and cutting an oversupply of housing. Communist Party officials affirmed in their 2016 policy statement that they’ll step up supply-side reforms such as dealing with overcapacity, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Even if officials can deliver 7% growth, that would still be the weakest full-year expansion since 1990. The gross domestic product report for 2015, due for release 19 January, will show a 6.9% expansion, according to the median of estimates in a Bloomberg survey. Forecasters see 6.5% growth this year and 6.3% in 2017.

President Xi Jinping has said GDP gains in the next five years should average at least 6.5% per year. Top researchers at China’s central bank said last month they expect economic growth to come in at 6.8% this year, while the top government-backed research organization recently said 2016 growth will slow to between 6.6 and 6.8%.

“Growth may weaken again in the first quarter of the year, and bumpy growth deceleration will likely continue for the full year of 2016," Goldman Sachs Group Inc. researchers led by senior China economist MK Tang in Hong Kong said in a report Friday. “We expect supportive policy measures to provide a key buffer to growth deceleration." Bloomberg

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Published: 04 Jan 2016, 11:06 AM IST
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