China’s economy shows pick-up amid leadership transition

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December 9, 2012

BEIJING: China released a series of figures on Sunday showing continued strength in the world's second largest economy as it prepares for new leaders tasked with sustaining the country's dramatic growth.

There was a double-digit increase in production at factories, workshops and mines for the first time since March, the National Bureau of Statistics said, a strong sign the country is shaking off the effects of the global economic slowdown.

December 9, 2012

BEIJING: China released a series of figures on Sunday showing continued strength in the world's second largest economy as it prepares for new leaders tasked with sustaining the country's dramatic growth.

There was a double-digit increase in production at factories, workshops and mines for the first time since March, the National Bureau of Statistics said, a strong sign the country is shaking off the effects of the global economic slowdown.

The 10.1 per cent November increase follows rises of 9.6 per cent the previous month, 9.2 per cent in September and a three-year low of 8.9 per cent in August.

Overall growth has slowed for seven straight quarters in China. It hit 7.4 per cent in the three months through September, the weakest performance in more than three years.

But the production statistics and other figures released by the bureau — including retail sales, fixed asset investment and inflation — all showed an improvement.

The statistics — the first major economic figures to be released since the Communist Party held its pivotal congress last month — will be welcomed by the political elite as it prepares to usher in new leaders in March.

"Overall it's a quite strong set of numbers, supporting our view of rebounding GDP growth," said Lu Ting, China economist with Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

President Hu Jintao has called for efforts to strengthen domestic consumption in a bid to create a new growth model, echoing mounting calls for change to stabilize growth amid the slowdown.

Economists say the country faces mounting pressure to restructure its economy to ensure long-term growth, such as reducing its reliance on exports and boosting domestic consumption.

HSBC China economist Sun Junwei said Sunday's figures have created favorable conditions to implement reforms under Beijing's new leaders.

Xi Jinping replaced Hu as party chief last month and is strongly expected to succeed him as national president next March. The party's new number two Li Keqiang is set to assume the premiership at the same time.

"The leaders will step up the reform efforts gradually in the coming quarters," Sun said.

"There will not be drastic changes that will happen overnight, but the current recovery will create favorable conditions to accelerate these reforms next year."

Other figures released on Sunday include retail sales, the main measure of consumer spending, which rose 14.9 per cent year-on-year in November from 14.5 per cent in October.

Fixed-asset investment, a key gauge of infrastructure spending, was up 20.72 percent year-on-year in the first 11 months of 2012, from 20.7 percent in January-October.

The consumer price index, the main measure of inflation, increased to an annual 2.0 per cent from a near three-year-low of 1.7 per cent in October, which will give lawmakers less room to loosen monetary policy.

Premier Wen Jiabao and commerce minister Chen Deming have both said in recent months that they expect China to achieve its targeted growth rate of 7.5 per cent this year despite the impact of the global slowdown.

China cut interest rates twice this year and has reduced the amount of funds banks must keep in reserve three times since last December, to encourage lending.

But it has avoided the kind of huge stimulus package it announced after the 2008-2009 global financial crisis, which sent inflation soaring.


Courtesy: AFP