China economic growth slows to 7.6% in second quarter

 
Chart showing Chinese GDP

New $175m mail centre shows companies still see China as an opportunity

China's economy has grown at its slowest pace in three years as investment slowed and demand fell in key markets such as the US and Europe.

Gross domestic product rose by 7.6% in the second quarter, compared with the same period a year ago. That is down from 8.1% in the previous three months.

In March, Beijing cut its growth target for the whole of 2012 to 7.5%.

China accounts for about a fifth of the world's total economic output and any slowdown may hamper a global recovery.

At the same time, many of Asia's biggest and emerging economies are becoming increasingly reliant on China as a trading partner.

"China has been a big factor for the slowdown in Asia this year," said Tai Hui from Standard Chartered Bank in Singapore.

He added that if China's growth does not pick up in the second half of the year then "that's going to mean a very difficult second half for a lot of the manufacturers in this region".

Spurring growth

Analysis

As the world's largest exporter, China is being hard hit by the slowdown in Europe and elsewhere.

These are the country's worst figures since the start of the global financial crisis.

China's leaders are pinning their hopes on investment - especially in state companies - to drive growth in the world's second largest economy.

In recent weeks, they've twice cut interest rates to bolster lending. The authorities are also pumping money into public works - such as social housing. Fuel prices have also been reduced.

Many economists believe these measures will ensure that China's growth rebounds in the coming months.

But with a once-in-a-decade leadership change starting later this year - this is a sensitive time in Chinese politics. China's leaders will be deeply concerned that any further slowdown could lead to rising social unrest.

However, despite Friday's slower growth figures many analysts tried to allay fears of a so-called hard landing in China's economy and its subsequent impact on the rest of the world.

"If you get a drop in the growth rate of 1 percentage point per annum, that's not a lot in terms of the world gross domestic product," Edmund Phelps, a professor of political economy at Columbia University and a Nobel prize winner, told the BBC.

He added that China had a lot of ammunition to counter the slowdown, some of which it has already started using because of the patchy recovery in the US, and the ongoing debt and economic issues in the eurozone.

China's central bank has cut the amount of money banks must keep in reserve in order to boost lending, and it recently cut the cost of borrowing twice in one month.

Earlier this week, Premier Wen Jiabao said that boosting investment would also be crucial for stabilising growth, fuelling expectation that more state-driven stimulus measures would be on the way.

"Now that China's growth is slowing, there are calls for yet another stimulus," said Edward Chancellor, global Strategist at investment management firm GMO.

Slowdown

But analysts warned that China's growth problems may not be solved by a simple injection of capital and a new round of government spending. Especially as many of today's issues can be traced back to the way the country tried to kick start growth after the global financial crisis in 2008-2009.

Michael Pettis, Professor of Finance, Peking University: China has been "massively over-investing"

At the time the central government began pumping huge amounts of money into the economy, mainly on infrastructure and construction spending.

This led to excess capacity, a surge in property prices and an increase in consumer costs and inflation.

Faced with these problems and amid fears that the economy may be overheating, policy makers decided to implement measures to curb lending and slow inflation.

Those steps, along with a drop in demand for Chinese goods from key markets such as Europe and the US, have caused the most recent cycle of slowing growth.

Start Quote

Credit works on an economy like steroids on the body of an athlete: you need ever larger injections to maintain the effect”

End Quote Edward Chanceloor Global strategist at GMO, an investment management firm

In 2011, China's economy grew by 9.2%, down from 2010's figure of 10.4% growth.

Domestic economy

But while the longer-term trend is of a slowdown, China also released a number of other figures on Friday and they painted a more nuanced and mixed picture of the economy.

According to the official figures, retail sales increased by 13.7% in June, little changed from May's 13.8% figure.

At the same time, electricity output, an indicator that many analysts use to calculate current business and consumer activity, was also flat in June at 393bn kilowatt-hours.

Optimists, however, would have been buoyed by news that new bank loans increased to $144.4bn in June, up from $124.4bn in May.

The BBC's John Sudworth in Shanghai says the data will do nothing to stop the economic squabbling over whether China is heading for a hard or soft landing.

"Rising stock piles of coal paint a vivid picture of just the kind of indicator the bears will use when arguing that 7.6% is proof of the impending economic catastrophe," he says.

"But here's another picture for you. A new DHL delivery hub built on the outskirts of Shanghai shows that there are still plenty of bulls out there too.

"For them 7.6% is probably a turning point and they also have their indicators of choice to support the case."

 

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  • rate this
    0

    Comment number 207.

    @ 193.mark_x

    A slower acceleration is still an acceleration. Since when is 7.6% growth rate 'decline'?

    I sense sour grapes...

  • rate this
    -4

    Comment number 206.

    The slowdown of Chinese mercantilism; the Eurozone shambles; ballooning US decifits; the insolvency of Ireland and Greece; Spanish mass unemployment; & Hollande's delusional policies in France are merely a prelude to a major, global lowering of living standards. The world economy has been floating on a bubble of credit & politicians' false promises - but markets always re-assert themselves.

  • rate this
    0

    Comment number 205.

    China has huge problems. Unchecked domestic debt, massive environmental problems and huge inequality. Growth is fueled by business deals between investors and those with rights to land use. There is little accountability and many of the huge projects undertaken may not bring any return. China may well be a Greece waiting to happen - except a Greece with 25% of the World's population.

  • rate this
    +1

    Comment number 204.

    why is China being blamed?? its a natural thing for developed countries to have bigger service sector than industry. and we Chinese reach the $18,000 per capita gdp then then Chinese and western manufacture firms would move operations to South east asia india and if Africa is stable enough they will get a huge share of manufacture as well, to no, u brits are getting your toy manufacturing job back

  • rate this
    +3

    Comment number 203.

    191. Claire
    To some extent I agree – you will not find one electrical appliance in my kitchen that is not BOSH

    Presumably because you think that Bosch products are all made in Germany?
    Unfortunately you are forgetting about their factories in France, Greece, Poland, Russia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Turkey, the United States, Mexico, Brazil, Peru, Thailand
    Oh yes - and China!

  • rate this
    -2

    Comment number 202.

    Main anemic growth is across BRICs - Brazil, Russia, India + China – which combine as biggest marginal generators of global growth. Even so, I believe worst is over; we are going to see stabilization & EVEN IMPROVEMENT in Chinese next quarter. I have 80% confidence that Chinese economy will pick up in 3rd quarter. Then whom will western countries blame for their own worsening performance?

  • rate this
    -4

    Comment number 201.

    10.
    John M
    3 Hours ago
    If you take anything the Government of China says at face value...more fool you!

    You mean that they have learned to lie, cheat, manipulate, con, overstate, steal and prevaricate like the so called honest Western governments stuffed full of corrupt politicians? No they have a long, long way to go before they become as delusional, greedy,and dishonest as the West.

  • rate this
    +1

    Comment number 200.

    186- The conditions were poor no question and I am not suggesting that safety is employed in China, the article did not specify what they were paid – just that it was low. The workers also refused to work in the conditions. A housing boom requires competition from buyers and the ability to afford prices. Our own manufacturing paid minimum wages for hard labour and also strikes over it.

  • rate this
    +2

    Comment number 199.

    China is on the brink..
    I was on holiday there earlier this year; our tour guide told us that 90% of school-leavers go to University; unfortunately that is leading to such an over-supply of graduates that graduates are now being paid LESS than school-leavers, but they all have debt from going to University.
    Sounds familiar?
    Level of contempt towards politicians is even greater there than here!

  • rate this
    +4

    Comment number 198.

    187. Peter B

    You are absolutely right.
    The minimum wage would price most manufactured goods out of the market I suspect if built in the UK.
    Large batch assembly jobs are exactly what the Chinese factories excel in.
    I have been buying fantastically good quality products from China for years.
    I cannot find anyone in the UK to make them even near the price.
    Consumers look mostly at the price.

  • rate this
    +2

    Comment number 197.

    Some see the global economy as an either/or relationship. It is fair to say that some in the West may have seen China's strength as partly responsible for their weakness. No doubt China's strength has aggravated those in the West who have been in decline. There may in fact be an argument that the rise of some regions brings the decline of others. But this may be a military argument, not econom

  • rate this
    +1

    Comment number 196.

    Even at 7% p.a. this would result in a doubling of China's economy in 10 years. That means a probable doubling of its consumption of the Earth's resources. In what sense can this ever be considered sustainable? Quantitative growth is not - nor can it ever be - the answer. What the Earth needs is Qualitative development. Economists and politicians need to stop lying to themselves and us.

  • rate this
    +1

    Comment number 195.

    Just to play devils advocate, surely the growth in China and other developing economies, albeit at a slowed rate, should be celebrated as a positive development of capitalism. The average person in this country still lives an incredibly privileged life compared to the average Chinese person. A rebalancing of world economies whatever your views , is lifting huge numbers of people out of poverty.

  • rate this
    +1

    Comment number 194.

    Hey. "What goes around,comes around."

    Sooner or later standards of living rise,expectations cannot be met & the circus moves on to another area where products are produced less expensively... Like Mexico for instance,where recent reports have shown manufacturing is moving to for just those reasons. Given enough time & sufficient impoverishment,one day it may become OUR TURN once again??

  • rate this
    0

    Comment number 193.

    China's growth is unsustainable as it is so heavily dependent on natural resources not least because manufactured goods have to be shipped around the world.

    We should be thankful for Chinese decline as the increases in food prices over the last 10 years are directly linked to it.

    When china returns to growth what does the future hold? How much for petrol, food, and the cost of living?

  • rate this
    0

    Comment number 192.

    What it means is that western economies are tanking since China depends so heavily on exports to the west. There are european countries including the US that would grasp at a %7.6 growth rate. China is merely reflective of the troubles elsewhere but even so foreign corporate investment in China is still strong and China keeps enlarging its debt holding on the US as US stalls.

  • rate this
    -3

    Comment number 191.

    181- To some extent I agree – you will not find one electrical appliance in my kitchen that is not BOSH – why because it’s cheaper in the long run (my dishwasher 7yrs now). In the case of TV’s, PCs, etc, with new technology, these always need upgrading anyway. With average finances put under pressure people will look for cheaper alternatives – Primark is doing well and expanding.

  • rate this
    +1

    Comment number 190.

    So maybe slave labour, totalitarian brutality and raping the environment aren't the way forward after all? Blimey. Who's going to break this to George Osborne?

  • rate this
    +3

    Comment number 189.

    "186. Claire
    For people who believe that China is successful due to slave wages"
    _______
    Claire - with respect, the subject in the article is an architect, not someone who performs multiple, mind-numbing, identical processes day in day out. Check this out
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/china/9006988/Mass-suicide-protest-at-Apple-manufacturer-Foxconn-factory.html

  • rate this
    -1

    Comment number 188.

    @185
    No. stating that people that do not feel the need for a bill of rights for this country will also laud human rights abuses in others is not a statement of fact it is an opinion and IMHO a stupid one.

    @184 Yes what the East India company et al did was wrong but time to stop wearing the sack cloth don't you think? That ended well over a century ago.

 

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