China economic activity swings back to growth in January - official PMI
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[January 31, 2023] By
Joe Cash
BEIJING (Reuters) -China's economic activity swung back to growth in
January, after a wave of COVID-19 infections passed through the country
faster than expected following abandonment of pandemic controls.
Domestic orders and consumption drove output higher, according to the
first broad data to show how quickly China is recovering from its COVID
reopening wave, but analysts warned that the economy faced persistent
weakness in external demand.
The official purchasing managers' index (PMI), which measures
manufacturing activity, rose to 50.1 in January from 47.0 in December,
the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) said on Tuesday. Economists in a
Reuters poll had predicted the PMI to come in at 48.0. Since the result
was above 50.0, it implied growth.
A rebound in non-manufacturing activity was more decisive than expected
by economists - but helped by a seasonal surge in spending for the Lunar
New Year holiday. That index, which covers services, leapt to 54.4, from
41.6 in December.
Both indexes had previously shown the economy to be contracting since
September.
"The PMI data showed that confidence in production, operation, and the
state of the market has improved significantly," Bruce Pang, chief
economist at Jones Lang Lasalle, wrote in a note, while pointing to the
level of a sub-index for new export orders, just 46.1, as cause for
concern.
As foreign economies have weakened under pressure from rising interest
rates, so has demand for China's exports, which last month were 9.9%
lower than a year earlier.
January's rebound in activity "is a bit unexpected as everyone is still
quite cautious," said Dan Wang, chief economist at Hang Seng Bank China.
"It's difficult for PMI to pick up in the same month as the Chinese New
Year, as workers normally have two weeks off."
"All the other real indicators - employment, inventory and delivery
times - got worse .... Export orders went down, so that means domestic
orders must have gone way up," she added.
FAST WAVE
Yet the speed of recovery in activity corresponds to what is
increasingly understood to have been an infection wave that came very
quickly, disrupting work and consumer demand, then also faded very
quickly, leaving factory managers to get production on line again and
retailers to welcome back customers.
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An employee measures a newly
manufactured ball mill machine at a factory in Nantong, Jiangsu
province, China June 28, 2019. REUTERS/Stringer/Files
Eighty percent of people in China had already been infected with
COVID-19 before the Lunar New Year festivities began, according to
the country's chief epidemiologist.
Still, strong holiday consumption has flattered the January PMI
report. Lunar New Year consumption had already been reported as
12.2% higher than in last year's holiday period, while holiday trips
inside China for the same period surged 74%, as people headed out to
celebrate for the first time in three years without COVID-19
restrictions.
After almost three years of following a zero-COVID strategy, China
eased pandemic controls in November then dropped them almost
completely in early December.
For the festive period, factories tried to make up ground lost to
last year's disruptions. Kevin Whyte, who sources homewares in China
for a major Britain-based retailer, told Reuters his partner factory
in China had offered bonuses to workers to shorten their vacations
over the New Year period.
The cabinet said on Saturday it would promote a recovery in
consumption as the major driver of the economy and also aim at
helping importers.
The IMF on Tuesday also addressed the speed of China's economic
recovery. The boost from renewed mobility would be short lived, it
said.
The international agency revised up its outlook for 2023 expansion
in gross domestic product to 5.3%, from the 4.4% it estimated in
October, but warned growth would likely fall again to 4.5% in 2024.
The official composite PMI, which combines manufacturing and
services, rose to 52.9 from 42.6 in December.
The private sector Caixin manufacturing PMI, which focuses more on
small firms and coastal regions, will be published on Feb. 1.
Analysts polled by Reuters expect a headline reading of 49.5, up
from 49.0 in December.
(Reporting by Joe Cash; Editing by Bradley Perrett)
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