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China’s economy grows 4.6% in third quarter


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China’s economy expanded 4.6 per cent year on year in the third quarter, official data showed on Friday, slower than in the previous three months, underlining faltering growth as Beijing steps up efforts to boost the economy.

The figure is the lowest in 18 months, below the government’s full-year target of 5 per cent and less than the 4.7 per cent recorded in the three months to June as sluggish consumption and a property slump weighed on household sentiment.

The softer growth will underscore the need for more support from Beijing, which in late September announced its biggest monetary stimulus since the pandemic and followed up with promises of heavy fiscal spending.

“The Chinese economy is caught in a doom loop, with cyclical and structural problems feeding off and reinforcing each other,” said Eswar Prasad, professor at Cornell University and senior fellow at Brookings.

He said the combination of declining growth, deflation and loss of confidence in the government’s policies, along with the “unravelling property sector and unfavourable demographics”, posed enormous challenges.

“The recently announced stimulus measures are a good start but . . . generating more balanced growth that is driven by household consumption and private business investment represents an even bigger challenge.”

Sheng Laiyun, deputy commissioner of the National Bureau of Statistics, told a media briefing that the Chinese economy’s growth was “overall stable”, while acknowledging that growth had fluctuated during the first three quarters of the year.

There were signs the economy was rebounding, he said, but “we are also aware these are preliminary changes, [the economy] is not on a firm enough footing” and more efforts will be made to boost growth.

Goldman Sachs analysts said in a note that the third-quarter figures “broadly beat low expectations”, driven by stronger industrial production and fixed-asset investment, which was supported by government bond issuance. Retail sales were stronger after the government initiated an appliance trade-in programme.

China’s markets reacted exuberantly to the news of monetary stimulus last month but have recently turned cautious as they await more details on fiscal stimulus. The CSI 300 index of Shanghai- and Shenzhen-listed stocks and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng benchmark are down in October, although they remain up for the year to date.

Efforts by the country’s economic planner, finance ministry and housing ministry to boost confidence have fallen short of expectations. The Hang Seng Mainland Properties index fell 6.7 per cent on Thursday after the housing ministry’s support for the property sector disappointed investors.

Authorities have yet to quantify the extra fiscal spending, but analysts have said this might be announced at a standing committee meeting of the National People’s Congress, China’s rubber-stamp parliament, in the coming weeks.

Industrial production grew 5.4 per cent year on year in September, exceeding the expectations of analysts polled by Reuters and the previous month’s 4.5 per cent, the NBS said on Friday.

Retail sales rose 3.2 per cent year on year in September, exceeding analysts’ expectations of 2.5 per cent. Fixed-asset investment was up 3.4 per cent in the first three quarters of 2024 year on year, slightly exceeding the forecasts of analysts polled by Reuters.

Analysts have expressed concern that significant measures to directly boost household consumption are largely absent from the stimulus measures.

The finance ministry’s fiscal plans mainly focus on help for local governments to refinance debt, recapitalise state banks and aid the purchase of some of China’s millions of unsold homes.



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