Showing posts with label growth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label growth. Show all posts

Monday, May 11, 2009

Indicators point to China recovery

Special Report: Global Financial Crisis


BEIJING,May 5-- The economy is likely to expand 7 percent in the second quarter - up from the first quarter's 6.1 percent - even as it confronts the painful prospect of shedding industrial overcapacity, a top government think tank said Monday.


"Economic growth will pick up in the second quarter as the government's stimulus measures gradually take effect," the State Information Center (SIC) forecast.

"There has been preliminary success in arresting the economy's downward trend," it said, but did not mention any fallout from the global H1N1 flu alert.

But Zhu Baoliang, an SIC economist and one of the authors of the SIC report, said the economy will only be slightly affected by the H1N1 flu.

Annualized GDP growth sank to a decade's low in the first quarter, largely because of a collapse in export demand.

But analysts said the economy might have bottomed out since then as latest economic figures are increasingly upbeat.

The CLSA China Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), a gauge of manufacturing activity, rose to 50.1 in April, the first time it has been above 50 since last August, CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets said yesterday. A PMI reading above 50 indicates an expansion of the manufacturing sector, while a reading below 50 signals a contraction.

Also, the PMI index compiled by the Federation of Logistics and Purchasing rose for the fifth straight month in April to 53.5 percent, up 1.1 percentage points from a month earlier.

The positive economic signs sent stock markets up across Asia, with the mainland's Shanghai Composite Index rising 3.3 percent and Hong Kong's Hang Seng index 5.5 percent.

"The Chinese government has been extremely successful in stimulating investment," said Eric Fishwick, CLSA head of economic research. "We hope that firmer domestic demand, as government spending gains traction, will keep the PMI above 50 in the months to come."

The World Bank said in a report in early April that the Chinese economy is expected to bottom out by the middle of 2009. It also forecast China's economic growth at 6.5 percent for the year.

The International Monetary Fund also forecast last month that growth in China is expected to slow to about 6.5 percent this year.

Consumer spending held fast over the past months, despite looming unemployment pressure. About 2.68 million vehicles were sold in the first quarter, making the nation the world's largest auto market during the period.

Housing sales surged 23.1 percent by value while retail sales rose 15.9 percent in the first quarter, 3.6 percentage points higher than the same period a year earlier.

"Based on the clear uptrend in recent economic activity we believe the worst is already behind China in terms of economic growth," Sun Mingchun, chief China economist of Nomura International, wrote in a research note. Sun said China would achieve its 8 percent growth target this year, with a V-shaped growth trajectory.

But some analysts argue that the figures could be volatile and the economy has to deal with the structural problem of overcapacity.

"It's still too early to say the economy is experiencing a real recovery," said Zhu, the SIC economist. "Over the past months, local enterprises have been running down their inventories. Now they have to reduce overcapacity."

(Source: China Daily)


Chinese economy rebounds, but return to rapid growth elusive

Special
Report:
Global Financial Crisis


By Xinhua Writer Cheng Yunjie

BEIJING, May 3 (Xinhua) -- Decoupling from the world,
and the economic downturn much of it is experiencing, has proven impossible for
China. But its resilience is receiving more recognition, with many leading
financial institutions upgrading their 2009 growth forecasts since mid-April.

The adjustments for gross domestic product (GDP)
growth, ranging from 0.5 to 2.3 percentage points, were based on signs of a
turnaround in the first quarter. These indicators included
stronger-than-expected real GDP growth, recovering property investment, a
pick-up in power consumption and a surge in bank lending.

Merrill Lynch Co. said it expected China's GDP
to grow 7.2 percent in the second quarter and 8 percent this year, while Goldman
Sachs raised its projection from 6 percent to 8.3 percent, the most optimistic
forecast so far. Other forecasts include UBS, which raised its estimate by 0.5
point to 7 percent and CLSA Asia-Pacific, which lifted its outlook by 1.5 point
to 7 percent.

China's policymakers can take heart from these
forecasts. Every upward revision, big or small, given the global economic
slowdown, might point to a better chance for the nation to achieve its 8-percent
growth target. That level of growth is considered necessary to raise living
standards while maintaining social stability.

But there's still the question of whether rapid
growth is sustainable. Some analysts believe it isn't unless China can rebalance
its economy and achieve higher efficiency, lower environmental costs and a more
reasonable balance among investment, trade and consumption.

QUANTITY OR
QUALITY?

In an interview with Xinhua, Stephen Roach, chairman
of Morgan Stanley Asia, urged Chinese authorities to get more serious about
stimulating private consumption because the global economy remains "pretty weak"
and might only achieve a weak recovery.

"China has responded to the crisis the way it has
always responded to global problems. That is, using proactive fiscal stimulus
mainly in the infrastructure area to provide temporary support in the downturn
until the global economy comes back. It worked in the 1997 Asian financial
crisis and the 2000-2001 mild recession. But this is a different sort of
problem," said Roach.

"Once the stimulus wears off and if there is no
follow-through, the Chinese economy will weaken again. I don't think exports
will recover in the weak global economy."

Domestic economists voice similar worries, saying
that the speed of growth doesn't matter as much as the quality. Liu Shangxi,
deputy dean of the Research Institute for Fiscal Science at the Ministry of
Finance, said that the 6.1-percent year-on-year growth in the first quarter had
been "fairly good" for China. But, he said, "sometimes, it's worth slowing down
a bit to have the economy move more stably."

Wang Xiaoguang, an economist with the National
Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the chief planning agency. said that
the government's annual growth target had become mostly symbolic.

For five years in a row, the target was 8 percent,
and for five years in a row, the growth rate overshot the target. Wang said the
government had faced a dilemma: a cut in the target might undermine public
confidence while a rise might tempt local governments to over-invest to meet a
high growth target.

The turnaround signs mostly reflected the impact of
the 4-trillion-yuan (586 billion U.S. dollars) stimulus package. Meanwhile,
retail sales still trailed investment in contributing to growth. Local
economists warned that the economy remained unbalanced and vulnerable.

"Historical records show that adjustments in the
Chinese economy would take two to three years, on average. Seven months have
passed since the impact of the global financial crisis began to tell on the
local economy.

"With a turnaround in sight, recovery might come
earlier than expected but there are still risks of a further slowdown," Chen
Dongqi, deputy chief of the Macro-Economic Research Institute under the NDRC,
told a business development forum in Guangdong in late April.

BUYING CURE

It's widely accepted among economists that China
should boost domestic private consumption by leading individuals to buy more and
save less. The key question is: how?

"Two big programs" Roach advocates call for doubling
the investment in social security immediately to 150 billion U.S. dollars and
establishing a goal of raising consumption as a share of the economy from 36
percent to 50 percent within five years.

"What I think is missing here is the social safety
net, social security pension and unemployment insurance. Because of the absence
of the safety net, China has seen a high level of precautionary saving," he
said.

Roach suggested that China develop a private pension
system in particular so total employee compensation could rise in tandem with
productivity. "Chinese companies need to partner with their workers and provide
medical care [and] retirement investing for their workforce. Chinese workers'
total pay package should have both wages and benefits," he said.

Liu agreed that the primary task in expanding
consumption was to raise incomes. "Securing the legitimate interests of workers
is particularly significant when the economy slumps. It would be like drinking
poison to quench one's thirst if businesses sought to expand corporate earnings
at the cost of workers' pay and benefits," he said.

Low labor costs and massive capacity have propped up
China's prosperity over the past decades. But the proportion of wages to
national income has been on a long decline since the 1990s.

Between 2002 and 2006 alone, economists estimate the
figure dropped from 62.1 percent to 57.1 percent. Meanwhile, the contribution of
consumption to GDP growth fell from 43.6 percent to 38.9 percent.

"A more meaningful index to judge the sustainability
of China's economic growth would be the proportion of wages to national income,"
Liu said. "If this ratio did not rise, people would remain poor, and thus
expanding consumption would be empty talk."

Chinese are far from wealthy. Only 4 percent of the
workforce, and just 10 percent of the urban workforce, earn more than 2,000 yuan
a month, the threshold for individual income tax.

As Chinese residents hold 2.43 trillion yuan in
aggregate deposits, economists say one immediate way to boost consumption would
be to stabilize spending on staple property -- including housing and automobiles
-- and support tourism and cultural activities.

"People spend much of their money on housing and
food. The government should encourage people to entertain themselves more," Wang
said.

CHINA 'NO
LOCOMOTIVE'

Although China might be the first major economy to
recover from the downturn, economists disagree on when China will return to
sustained high growth.

Morgan Stanley, for example, has forecast a firm
recovery by mid-year, but said sustainable growth through 2010 would still hinge
on what happens in other countries.

"China will be stronger. But will that strength be
enough to allow others to follow in its footsteps? I don't think so," said
Roach.

"Most of China's resilience comes from infrastructure
building, roads, property consumption ... [this] won't have an impact on the
United States and Europe. This resilience is only temporary while its stimulus
is local rather than global."

Central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan also warned in
late April during World Bank-IMF meetings in Washington that the rebound in
China's economy had to be consolidated. He said conditions in China would permit
rapid economic development again, once macroeconomic policies such as the
stimulus plan took effect.

Challenging internal and external conditions, he
said, included continuously shrinking external demand, a relatively large
decline in exports, overcapacity in some industries, falling government revenue
and lingering employment pressure.

As China emerges from the shadow of the downturn,
together with many of its Western partners, the world is closely watching the
socialist market economy that it is still trying to develop.

It was interesting to see that there was much "the
ideologically-constrained West" could learn from China, just as there was much
China could learn from the West, said Roach.

"China has gone slow in many areas, especially in the
opening up of its financial market. But China made the right choice," he said.

"Focusing on stability is a huge plus for China. But
the nation must be vigilant in its financial policies, especially monetary and
regulatory policies, and not allow asset bubbles and financial innovations it
doesn't understand," said Roach.

S Korea's money supply growth stands at 3-month low in March

SEOUL, May 11 (Xinhua) -- South Korea's money supply grew by the smallest
amount in three months in March with local banks remaining reluctant to extend
loans, the central bank said Monday.


The country's liquidity aggregate, which measures the nation's total
currency in circulation, stood at 2,340.9 trillion won (1.89 trillion U.S.
dollars) as of end-March, marking an on-year increase of 10.6 percent, the Bank
of Korea (BOK) said.

The March rise was a slow down from a 10.8 percent on-year increase of the
previous month, marking the slowest growth since December 2008, according to the
BOK.

"Slowing growth in the money supply in March came despite a large surplus
of the current account as local banks are cautious about extending credit to
households and firms," the BOK said.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Urban areas of China's Yangtze Delta see slower Q1 GDP growth

Special
Report:
Global Financial Crisis



NANJING, May 3 (Xinhua) -- Major cities in the
Yangtze River Delta, a locomotive of economic growth in eastern China, reported
slower gross domestic product (GDP) growth in the first quarter as the global
downturn intensified, the Wuxi statistical bureau reported Sunday.


The cities included Shanghai, Nanjing, Suzhou, Wuxi,
Changzhou, Zhenjiang, Nantong, Yangzhou, Taizhou, Hangzhou, Ningbo, Jiaxing,
Huzhou, Shaoxing and Zhoushan.

Their aggregate GDP was 1.2 trillion yuan (175.7
billion U.S. dollars), up 7.9 percent from a year earlier. That growth rate was
5.2 percentage points less than the year-earlier level.

Exports fell 22 percent to 91.6 billion U.S. dollars
and industrial output of major companies in these cities fell 3.7 percent to
2.34 trillion yuan.

However, the cities fared better on two other
economic fronts during the first quarter. Fixed-asset investment rose 14.9
percent to 539.2 billion yuan and retail sales rose 14.6 percent to 491.3
billion yuan.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

IMF deputy chief sees growth return by year end

Special Report:Global Financial
Crisis

DAVOS, SWITZERLAND, Jan. 31 (Xinhua) -- The world
economy could return to growth by the end of this year after being hit hard by
the financial crisis, a senior official of the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
said Saturday.

"We believe that with the adequate policy response
... the world economy can return to growth by the end of this year and to trend
growth in 2010," John Lipsky, first deputy managing director of IMF told
delegates at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski resort of Davos.

He said the IMF will need at least another 500
billion U.S. dollars to expand its capital basis as more countries may rely on
its support to tide over the economic turmoil.

Speaking at the same panel discussion, Bank of Canada
Governor Mark Carney said he was more optimistic than a IMF forecast for next
year, based on reason that the stimulus programs installed by various
governments may take effect.

The latest IMF forecast on Wednesday said the world
economic growth is projected to plummet to 0.5 percent in 2009, the lowest in 60
years, before rebounding to 3.0 percent in 2010.

French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde warned that
the world economic crisis could provoke "social unrest."

"Social unrest and protectionism are the two major
risks of the world economic crisis," she said, adding that the risks were
increased by "having to engage taxpayers' money and by hampered growth."

She urged world governments to take decisive actions
before the leaders of the Group of 20 nations (G20) are due to meet in London in
April, a follow-up to their first summit on the financial crisis in Washington
last November.

"We need to give an extremely strong signal as early
as April 2 at the G20 meeting in London to restore confidence in the system,"
she said.

Meanwhile, Carney warned that banks have so far
underestimated the commitments made by governments to calm down the financial
markets, making the bailout efforts less effective.

"They are heavily, too heavily discounting the very
clear commitment from the G7 that no systemically important institution will be
allowed to fail. That is the first line of the Oct. 8 communique which was
literally typed in by the G7 finance ministers themselves," he said, "The power
of that and the degree of commitment to that has been underestimated."


UN agency: global economic turmoil halts upward trend in foreign travel

UNITED NATIONS, Jan. 27 (Xinhua) -- The current global economic slowdown brought the growth of international tourism to a standstill in 2008 and threatens to reverse the historic four-year gains made by the industry in foreign travel, according to a report published on Tuesday by the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO).

Although international tourist arrivals reached 924 million in 2008, up 16 million from 2007 or a two percent overall increase on the year, growth stagnated in the second half of last year, hitting Europe the hardest.

The collapse of financial markets, sharp increases in commodity and oil prices and volatile exchange rate fluctuations combined to force a one percent decline in international travel in the six months from July, a trend that is expected to continue in 2009.

A three percent drop off in international arrivals across Europe after June meant the continent was the only region to experience stagnation over the whole year, reported the January 2009 issue of the UNWTO World Tourism Barometer.

International travel to Asia also decreased by three percent in the second half of 2008 after double-digit growth in 2007 and a six percent increase in the first part of 2008.

On the other hand, the Americas, up one percent overall; Africa, up four percent; and the Middle East five percent; had all posted positive results in the second half of the year, although with a significant slowdown compared with the period between January and June.

The UNWTO report forecasted continued stagnation or decline for this year and beyond, but noted that the high degree of economic uncertainty makes predictions of international travel difficult. If the economy starts to show signs of an early recovery, foreign travel might grow slightly in 2009, but if the economy deteriorates further, then the current forecast might be revised downwards.

As most of the travel to the Americas and Europe originates from countries already suffering from historically severe economic recession, UNWTO expects those two regions to be the most affected with a decline of up to two percent.

Predictions for Asia and the Pacific, on the other hand, are positive, although growth will continue to be much slower compared with the region's performance in recent years; the same applies to Africa and the Middle East.

The UNWTO report underscored the fact that the softening of international tourism growth follows four historically strong years, with seven percent annual growth between 2004 and 2007.