China’s economy betrayed further signs of strain on Thursday with data showing a sharp slowdown in consumer spending and factory production while investment growth hit a record low as the trade US war takes its toll.
The readings are the latest to give a headache to leaders in Beijing, who are battling the tariffs row with the US as well as a weak global outlook, while trying to control a debt mountain at home.
Officials said retail sales, a key gauge of spending by the country’s vast army of consumers, grew 7.2 percent on-year in October, down 0.6 percentage points from September and short of expectations.
The figures from the National Bureau of Statistics also showed growth in industrial production came in at 4.7 percent, from 5.8 percent a month earlier.
And fixed-asset investment expanded 5.2 percent in the first 10 months, the lowest ever recorded with comparable data going back to 1998. Forecasts had been for 5.4 percent.
Liu Aihua at the NBS warned China was facing a “complex international economic situation” with downward pressure on the domestic economy.
And analysts warned of more headwinds for the world’s number two economy, which expanded six percent in the third quarter, its worst reading in almost three decades.
“Not only were last month’s data weak, but further weakness lurks ahead,” warned Martin Lynge Rasmussen of Capital Economics, saying he expects more monetary easing.
Authorities have unveiled a series of measures to kick-start growth including major tax and rate cuts as well as scrapping foreign investment restrictions in its stock market.
The latest figures follow data at the weekend showing factory prices falling at their fastest pace in three years as orders slow down, while consumer price inflation is only being supported by a surge in the cost of pork owing to an African swine fever epidemic.
There are hopes that the trade stand-off with the United States can be resolved, with the two close to a partial agreement that could see them begin to roll back the tariffs each have imposed on hundreds of billions of dollars-worth of goods.
But Rasmussen warned that while optimism about a mini trade deal could “could provide a boost to corporate investment in the near term”, the focus would soon afterwards shift to “more intractable issues that we think will eventually lead the (wider) trade talks to break down”.
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