Bad mood due to corona measures in China – “The downward pressure has increased”

Xi Jinping

The Chinese president plans to be confirmed for an unusual third term at the Communist Party Congress on October 16.

(Photo: AP)

Beijing China’s economy is suffering from lockdowns and other restrictions in the fight against the pandemic. While an official economic barometer only showed a slight upward trend on Friday, an independent leading indicator in the manufacturing sector fell surprisingly sharply.

Sentiment in the service sector also deteriorated more than expected. “The downward pressure has increased,” noted chief economist Wang Zhe of the business magazine “Caixin”.

The weakness of the second-largest economy is bad news ahead of the five-yearly Communist Party Congress that begins Oct. 16 in Beijing. After ten years, head of state and party leader Xi Jinping wants to be confirmed at the party conference for an unusual third term.

In the second quarter, growth fell to just 0.4 percent. Experts expect that the government’s growth target of 5.5 percent for this year will be missed. The World Bank significantly reduced its forecast for China this week to 2.8 percent.

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The statistics office reported that the purchasing managers’ index (PMI) for manufacturing rose to 50.1 in September from 49.4 in the previous month. The official index primarily measures the mood in large and state-owned companies, which are benefiting from the strong aid that is intended to boost the economy.

>> Read here: Chinese yuan falls to record low – central bank under pressure

On the other hand, the index of the well-known magazine “Caixin”, which includes more private and medium-sized companies, fell surprisingly sharply from 49.5 to 48.1 points. It was the second monthly decline in a row. A reading below the 50-point mark indicates contraction in the industry, while above it is expected to be expanding. According to the statistics office, the official index in the service sector, which also includes the ailing construction sector, fell to 50.6 points from 52.6 in August – also more than predicted.

China sticks to zero-Covid strategy

“Overall, the pandemic situation remains serious and complicated, and the negative impact of Covid controls on the economy is clear,” said Caixin expert Wang Zhe. “Entrepreneurs are much less optimistic.” For them, the impact of the pandemic measures is the strongest factor in the downturn.

In the past few weeks, there have been outbreaks of Covid in many regions, which have been responded to with lockdowns, mass tests and other restrictions. As the rest of the world tries to live with the virus, China continues to pursue a zero-Covid strategy to nip any outbreak in the bud and prevent healthcare systems from being overwhelmed.

Both supply and demand eased in September, Caixin reported. “The labor market was weak.” Logistics and transport are slightly sluggish. “The economy’s biggest problems are insufficient employment, sluggish demand and fickle expectations,” Wang Zhe said.

China’s Prime Minister Li Keqiang is currently holding one crisis meeting after another to initiate a recovery. Most recently, the prime minister admitted that weak demand was an “acute challenge”. Efforts are also being made to keep logistics “smooth” and supplies of coal, electricity and other energy “stable,” the prime minister said, without going into more specific detail about repeated, nagging bottlenecks.

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