BEIJING (AP) — China’s economic growth fell to a three-year
low, and a potential recovery later this year will probably be too weak to pull
the world out of its slump.
The world’s second-largest
economy grew by 7.6 percent over a year earlier in the three months ending in
June, its slowest since early 2009 during the global crisis, data showed
Friday.
Analysts pointed to strong bank
lending as a sign of a possible recovery in the second half, but slower growth
in retail sales and factory output left them uncertain how fast or how
vigorously the economy will improve.
“The soft landing is still on
track largely as expected, but the rebound may be slightly more drawn out,”
said Moody’s Analytics economist Alaistair Chan in a report.
The latest data dampen hopes
China can make up for weak demand from debt-crippled Europe and the United
States, which is struggling with a sluggish recovery.
“It is not certain whether or not
there will be a strong upward rebound. But at least the economic growth rate
will stop coming down,” said economist Xiao Li at Industrial Bank in Shanghai.
The impact of lower Chinese
demand could fall hardest on Asian economies that supply industrial components
to its vast manufacturing industry, as well as exporters of oil, iron ore and
other commodities such as Australia and African nations. Chinese imports of
steel, copper and oil have declined by volume over a year ago.
On Thursday, the Asian
Development Bank cut its growth forecast for developing Asia to 6.6 percent
from April’s outlook of 6.9 percent. It cited Europe’s financial crisis, the
slow pace of U.S. recovery and lower growth in China and India.
In a positive sign for China, a
different measure of growth showed output in the latest quarter rose 1.8
percent over the previous three-month period, up from the first quarter’s 1.6 percent.
Beijing began reporting such quarter-on-quarter growth — the system used by
other major economies — only last year.
June bank lending rose 16 percent
over May, beating forecasts.
The economy “will begin to
improve meaningfully from August onwards,” said JP Morgan economists Haibin
Zhu, Grace Ng and Lu Jiang in a report.
The slowdown has raised the
threat of job losses and political tension at a sensitive time for the ruling
Communist Party. It is trying to enforce calm ahead of a planned once-a-decade
handover of power to younger leaders late this year.
Beijing has responded to the
slower growth by cutting interest rates twice since the start of June, reducing
fuel prices and pumping money into the economy through higher investment by
state-owned industry and more spending on building low-cost housing and other
public works.
Premier Wen Jiabao, China’s top
economic official, said last weekend the economy faces pressure to slow
further, suggesting Beijing might be considering new stimulus measures.
“We need to see what policies the
government will carry out to decide how good the economy will look,” said
Industrial Bank’s Xiao.
The communist government has more
leeway than the United States or Europe to implement more stimulus measures.
China’s state-owned banking industry is flush with cash and avoided the
financial turmoil that battered Western lenders. Government debt is relatively
low.
Quarterly growth was in line with
the government’s target of 7.5 percent for the year, which forecasters say
China still is likely to achieve. That is far above Western levels but a marked
drop from 2010′s explosive 10.5 percent expansion.
Even after growth rebounds, it is
unlikely ever to return to double-digit annual rates. Communist leaders are
trying to reduce reliance on exports and investment and promote cleaner,
energy-efficient growth based on technology development and consumer spending,
which will produce slower gains.
“After 30 years of vigorous
growth, China’s economy has entered a period of transition,” government
spokesman Sheng Laiyun said at a news conference. “The potential growth rate
will drop.”
Sheng rejected suggestions by
some analysts that the slowdown might be deeper than reported and that Beijing
ordered companies to make the economy look healthier by inflating data on
electric power consumption, a key industrial indicator.
“I want to say right here they
are wrong,” Sheng said.
June retail sales growth declined
to 12.1 percent adjusted for price changes, down from the previous month’s 13.8
percent. Growth in factory output edged down to 9.5 percent from May’s 9.6 percent.
In a potentially bad sign for
China’s foreign suppliers, June import growth fell by half from May’s level to
6.3 percent as factories facing weak orders cut back on raw materials
purchases.
China’s rapid economic growth has
decelerated steadily for eight quarters, the longest slowdown since the
government began reporting such data in 1992, according to Yu Bin, a Cabinet
researcher. He said the previous record was six quarters.
The slowdown is due in part to
controls imposed in 2010-11 to cool overheating and inflation fueled in part by
Beijing’s huge stimulus in response to the 2008 crisis. Chinese leaders
reversed course last year and began easing controls after global demand
abruptly plunged.
“It is often forgotten that this
recent slowdown has been an orchestrated one” to cool inflation, said Cameron
Peacock, a market analyst for Australia’s IG Markets. “Mission accomplished.
China now has the room to re-stimulate its economy.”
Beijing is moving cautiously
after its 2008 stimulus pushed up inflation and spurred a wasteful building
boom. Authorities say curbs on building and home sales to cool surging housing
prices will remain in place, even though pumping up the slumping construction
industry offers a quick way to boost growth.
Some parts of Beijing’s response
to the slump threaten to set back efforts to reduce reliance on exports and
government investment and to nurture more self-sustaining growth driven by
domestic consumption. Wen said this week that sustaining investment should be
China’s priority, an acknowledgement that consumption is rising more slowly
than planned.
Investment picked up in June,
with spending on factories, real estate and other fixed assets rising 23.2
percent, up from the previous month’s 20.1 percent.
China’s relative strength
conceals severe pain in some industries. Some retailers say monthly sales have
fallen by as much as half this year and the Chinese shipbuilding industry
association says May orders were down by almost half from a year earlier.
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