China first-quarter GDP growth seen easing only slightly
as trade tensions mount
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[April 16, 2018]
By Elias Glenn
BEIJING (Reuters) - China likely carried
most of its strong economic momentum from last year into the first
quarter of 2018, with government crackdowns on financial risks and
industrial pollution dragging less on activity than earlier expected, a
Reuters poll showed.
Beijing is looking to keep the economic balancing act intact even as it
faces rising trade tensions with its largest trading partner, the United
States, that could impact billions of dollars in cross-border trade.
A poll of 60 economists showed growth in gross domestic product likely
eased marginally to 6.7 percent in the first quarter from a year
earlier, compared with the 6.8 percent clip in the previous two
quarters.
At the start of the year, analysts were penciling in a first-quarter
slowdown to 6.6 percent.
The consensus forecast indicates growth remained comfortably above the
government's target of around 6.5 percent for the full year, which could
give policymakers more confidence to step up efforts to reduce risks in
the financial system and clean up the environment.
China's economic data so far this year has pointed to steady if slightly
slower growth from 2017, with factory output holding up despite smog
controls and consumer spending still relatively resilient.
Central bank governor Yi Gang said on Thursday that first quarter
economic data has so far been slightly better than expected.
China will release first quarter GDP on Tuesday, along with March
industrial output, retail sales, property sales and investment, and
fixed asset investment data.
Economists in the poll estimated GDP grew 1.5 percent
quarter-on-quarter, easing from 1.6 percent in the fourth quarter,
though only 15 analysts gave sequential forecasts.
Data on Friday showed export growth slowed in the first quarter in yuan
terms, indicating overseas demand may not provide the same boost to
overall GDP as it did last year, when the economy posted its first
pick-up in growth since 2010.
Analysts say the main risk to China's economy is now centered on the
escalating trade dispute with the United States.
Washington and Beijing have threatened tit-for-tat tariffs in recent
weeks, stemming from U.S. accusations of unfair Chinese trade practices.
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Workers carry their tools and belongings as they climb down the
Jiankou section of the Great Wall, located in Huairou District,
north of Beijing, China, June 7, 2017. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj/File
Photo
But no hard timeline has been set by either side for implementation, offering
hope of a compromise that would reduce the fallout for both sides and collateral
damage for other trade-reliant Asian economies plugged into China's supply
chains.
"Both the choice of Section 301 and the number of products included in the list
under investigation point to the U.S. protectionist wind against China being
very different, and frankly much more worrisome, than past ones," Alicia Garcia
Herrero, chief economist for Asia Pacific at Natixis, said in a note on Monday.
A researcher with China's state planning agency said last week that China's
economy will see little impact from the trade dispute, as the country's vast
domestic market can compensate for any external impact.
Separate data on Friday showed China is making solid progress in reining in
off-balance sheet lending that largely prompted the sweeping crackdown by
regulators.
Total credit in the economy in the first quarter fell nearly 20 percent on-year,
though some economists think Beijing will not tap the brakes too hard and risk a
sharper economic slowdown.
The "sharp decline in March is unlikely to be sustained over (an) extended
period of time", economists at China International Capital Corporation said in a
note Friday.
China "will still strive to strike the balance between the medium-long term goal
of financial deleveraging vs. maintaining relatively stable liquidity conditions
and growth momentum," they wrote.
While economic growth could bounce back in spring due to seasonal factors such
as a pick-up in construction, analysts still maintain that activity in China
will start to cool eventually, weighed down by a cooling property market and
rising borrowing costs.
(Reporting by Elias Glenn; Editing by Kim Coghill)
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