Home > World > China's economy less healthy in third quarter

China's economy less healthy in third quarter

Written by Business World, on 28th Sep 2016. Posted in World

article headline

China's economy was less healthy in the third quarter than a recent spate of upbeat data suggest, with growth coming exclusively from manufacturing and property while the services and retail sectors faltered, a private survey showed.

Manufacturing posted its fastest expansion nationally, with 53% of companies seeing revenue gains, up 3% from a year earlier, a quarterly survey of more than 3,100 firms by China Beige Book International (CBB) showed.

While a government infrastructure building spree and housing boom have given a much needed boost to "old economy" firms from steel mills to cement makers, CBB noted foreign orders had also improved.

But "new economy" sectors - services, transportation and retail - showed weakness both quarter-on-quarter and year-on-year, with cash flow and profits deteriorating, leaving the country on uneven footing.

Services slowed and retail firms experienced one of their weakest performances in the history of the survey as e-commerce firms gobbled up more market share.

"The chief problem in China economic analysis remains the unwillingness to look behind dubious headline data," authors Leland Miller and Derek Scissors wrote in a note accompanying the report.

"High-profile indicators such as GDP and the PMIs this quarter will rubber stamp the government's recovery narrative, but only those with nothing on the line should accept this at face value."

Official data for August raised hopes the economy was stabilising and perhaps even picking up, with industrial output, retail sales and property investment all quickening more than expected, while industrial profits grew at the strongest pace in three years.

But while the property sector showed another quarter of strong growth, there are signs that China's real estate boom is starting to stutter, the CBB report said.

Property sales revenue is uneven across the country, while companies' cash flow weakened, prompting a spree of new borrowing that will likely add to worries about rapidly rising debt levels. Moreover, more and more cities are tightening restrictions on home purchases as prices soar.

In the services sector, growth weakened in every area aside from hospitality. Retailers with only brick-and-mortar stores saw no net revenue growth in the third quarter.

"Struggling retail and a property bubble is not the kind of stability many are touting," the report said.

Source: www.businessworld.ie

About us

More articles from World

image Description

US Multinationals Spend Over €31bn In The Irish Economy Every Year

Read more
image Description

Enterprise Ireland Trade Mission to Gulf Region

Read more
image Description

Asia Matters Business Awards celebrate record €120bn Ireland-Asia trade

Read more
image Description

Aer Lingus launches largest ever Transatlantic schedule

Read more
image Description

American Chamber celebrates 950 US Companies In Ireland

Read more