China's manufacturing powerhouse Guangdong suspends PMI
data release as numbers slide
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[December 18, 2018]
BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese export hub Guangdong has stopped publishing
a monthly economic indicator that gauges growth momentum in its massive
manufacturing sector after central authorities claimed local surveying
and publication of the data to be "illegal".
The southern province of Guangdong, famed for its vibrant tech scene and
vast factory base as one of the first beneficiaries of China's opening
policy, has been particularly vulnerable to China's bitter trade war
with the United States this year as billions in U.S. tariffs hit Chinese
exports.
Its manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI), published monthly by
the Guangdong Department of Industry and Information Technology, had
been treading lower than the official index for five straight months
until the data series stopped updating in October.
In a bearish sign for the industry, the value of export orders to the
United States signed in November at China's largest trade fair in
Guangdong's provincial capital Guangzhou dropped 30.3 percent on the
year.
The abrupt data suspension breaks a near seven-year tradition since
Guangdong started the series at the end of 2011. In its last release for
September, Guangdong's PMI was 50.2, compared to the official gauge of
50.8 for the month.
In a Q&A published on its website on Tuesday, the National Bureau of
Statistics said it received complaints at the end of October that
Guangdong had been illegally surveying for a monthly index.
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A boy looks at cargo ships passing along the Pearl River in
Guangzhou, Guangdong province, August 6, 2014. REUTERS/Alex Lee/File
Photo
"The investigation showed that Guangdong's Department of Industry and
Information Technology failed to renew approval from the statistics
bureau after its previous registration expired," the bureau said.
It added the Guangdong government had also been publishing the PMI data
without submitting the numbers to the bureau first to be audited and
approved.
The bureau said Guangdong was taking corrective measures and if
conditions were met, the data release could be resumed again in the
future.
The Guangdong Department of Industry and Information, in response to an
anonymous inquiry on its website about the missing data on Dec. 10, said
it received notice from the bureau at the end of October that surveying
for the PMI index should be arranged by the bureau and the department
had stopped data collection at its request.
(Reporting by Yawen Chen and Beijing Monitoring Desk; Editing by Nick
Macfie)
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