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Business

China industrial output growth jumps to five-month high

Published: 10 Aug 2013 - 02:04 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 11:10 pm


A vendor counts Chinese yuan notes at a market in Beijing yesterday.

BEIJING: Growth in China’s key industrial production accelerated to a five-month high in July, the government said yesterday, providing optimistic pointers for the world’s second-largest economy after months of negative indicators.

Industrial production, which measures output at factories, workshops and mines, rose 9.7 percent year-on-year, well above analyst expectations of 9.0 percent in a survey by Dow Jones Newswires.

Authorities also announced steady expansion in retail sales and fixed asset investment, and a benign inflation figure of 2.7 percent, unchanged on last month.

Analysts said the figures pointed to a more stable outlook for China’s economy — seen as a key driver of global growth. Lu Ting, a Hong Kong-based economist for Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said the “overall figures are actually very good, especially the industrial output figure”.

Gross domestic product (GDP) in China expanded 7.8 percent in 2012, its slowest annual pace in 13 years. 

Growth slipped to 7.7 percent in the January-March period this year and slowed further to 7.5 percent in the second quarter, raising alarm bells over possible deeper weakness.

But after Friday’s figures Lu said: “The momentum, if maintained, would in fact make everyone’s estimation about the second half rather pessimistic, so we will likely see a round of GDP forecast upgrades soon.”

Beijing has set a goal of a 7.5 percent increase in GDP this year and ANZ economists Liu Li-Gang and Zhou Hao said in a report the better-than-expected July data made it “more likely to be attainable”. 

The government has largely faced down mounting pessimism over the economy and refused to undertake major stimulus efforts as it vows to restructure China’s economy to make it less dependent on exports and investment, and driven more by the power of the country’s consumers.

The output figures came on the heels of robust trade figures and an official manufacturing survey last week that showed expansion when many analysts had expected a contraction.

Exports and imports, which had contracted in June, rebounded in July, growing 5.1 percent and 10.9 percent year-on-year respectively, according to Customs. Two-way trade rose 7.8 percent year-on-year, slightly lower than the government’s eight percent target for this year but “showing a stabilising and recovering trend”, Customs said.

July’s output growth figure was higher than June’s 8.9 percent and marked the best performance since the 9.9 percent recorded for January and February, which were released together due to distortions related to Chinese New Year.AFP