China's economy stumbles on power crunch, property woes
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[October 18, 2021] By
Kevin Yao and Gabriel Crossley
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's economy hit its
slowest pace of growth in a year in the third quarter, hurt by power
shortages and wobbles in the property sector, highlighting the challenge
facing policymakers as they seek to prop up a faltering recovery while
reining in the real estate sector.
Gross domestic product expanded 4.9% from a year ago, missing forecasts,
as attempts by Beijing to curb lending to the property sector
exacerbated the fallout from electricity shortages which sent factory
output back to levels last seen in early 2020, when heavy COVID-19 curbs
were in place.
The world's second-largest economy had staged an impressive rebound from
last year's pandemic slump but the recovery has lost steam from the
blistering 18.3% growth clocked in the first quarter.
Under President Xi Jinping, a drive to make structural changes that
address long-term risks and distortions, which has involved crackdowns
on the property sector and technology giants, as well as carbon emission
cuts, has taken a toll.
Analysts at Barclays cut their fourth quarter forecast by 1.2 percentage
points to 3.5% on the disappointing data.
Policymakers will now have to balance the impact of those structural
changes with steps that will shield the economy and tame contagion risks
from a debt crisis at major developer China Evergrande Group.
"In response to the ugly growth numbers we expect in coming months, we
think policymakers will take more steps to shore up growth, including
ensuring ample liquidity in the interbank market, accelerating
infrastructure development and relaxing some aspects of overall credit
and real estate policies," said Louis Kuijs, head of Asia economics at
Oxford Economics.
A Reuters poll of analysts had expected GDP to rise 5.2% in the third
quarter.
The weak numbers sent the yuan and most Asian stock markets lower amid
broader investor concerns about the world economic recovery.
In Europe, China-exposed luxury stocks including LVMH, Kering and Hermes
fell about 3% each, also hurt by Xi's call for the expansion of a
consumption tax.
POLICY-DRIVEN
China, still an avowedly socialist country, has pledged to reduce
inequality after years of breakneck growth but may have to tread
cautiously to avoid derailing a private sector that has been a vital
engine of growth and jobs, analysts say.
In an essay in the ruling Communist Party journal Qiushi last week, Xi
called for progress on a long-awaited property tax that could help
reduce wealth gaps.
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People walk along at a shopping area in Shanghai, China October 15,
2021. REUTERS/Aly Song
New construction starts in September slumped for a sixth straight month,
NBS data showed, the longest spate of monthly declines since 2015, as
cash-strapped developers reined in investment and paused projects
following tighter borrowing limits.
Meanwhile, the industrial sector has been hit by power rationing
triggered by coal shortages, as well as environmental curbs on heavy
polluters like steel plants and floods over the summer.
Overall industrial output rose just 3.1% in September from a year
earlier, marking the slowest growth since March 2020, during the first
wave of the pandemic.
Aluminium output declined for the fifth consecutive month and daily
crude steel output hit the lowest level since 2018.
Bucking the negative trend, retail sales grew 4.4%, faster than
forecasts and the 2.5% growth in August, and the surveyed nationwide
jobless rate fell from 5.1% to 4.9%.
"Most of the (negative) factors are policy-driven... the economy is
having a lot of pain points and these pain points are not going away
soon because policies are here to stay, and therefore it will continue
into 2022," said Iris Pang, chief economist for Greater China at ING.
On a quarterly basis, growth eased to 0.2% in July-September from a
downwardly revised 1.2% in the second quarter.
Premier Li Keqiang said last week that China has ample tools to cope
with economic challenges despite slowing growth, and expressed
confidence in hitting full-year development goals.
On Sunday, People's Bank of China governor Yi Gang said the economy is
expected to grow 8% this year.
Still, the central bank is expected to remain cautious about monetary
easing due to worries about high debt and property risks.
Analysts polled by Reuters expect the People's Bank of China to refrain
from attempts to stimulate the economy by reducing the amount of cash
banks must hold in reserve until the first quarter of 2022.
(This story adds dropped word in paragraph 11)
(Reporting by Kevin Yao and Gabriel Crossley; Editing by Sam Holmes and
Carmel Crimmins)
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