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Economists cut China's growth outlook further for 2023
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Economists cut China's growth outlook further for 2023
Aug 28, 2023 9:22 PM

China’s economic outlook is showing no signs of improvement, with forecasters broadly trimming their expectations for the nation’s recovery, prices and trade.

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Economists now see gross domestic product expanding 5.1 percent in 2023 from the prior year, according to the median estimate in the latest Bloomberg survey. That’s down from an earlier expectation of 5.2 percent and brings projections closer to the government’s target of about 5 percent — a number widely seen as conservative when it was set in March.

The downgrade is attributable in part to lower projections for growth in the third quarter: Economists now see GDP expanding 4.4 percent in the July-to-September period from a year ago, down from an earlier expectation of 4.6 percent.

Growth is expected to slow to 4.5 percentin 2024, down from a projection of a 4.8 percent expansion previously.

The growth momentum is slowing “due to a worsening residential property investment decline and a drag from poor export numbers,” said Mike Gallagher, director of research at Continuum Economics. The research firm sees GDP expanding 4.9 percent this year.

China has as much as a 30 percent chance of experiencing a “hard landing” this year despite the nation’s efforts at stimulating the economy using fiscal and monetary policy, Gallagher added.

The pessimism comes as recent data showed the economic outlook worsening for China. Bank loans plunged to a 14-year low last month, while deflation is setting in and exports are contracting.

The economists surveyed by Bloomberg all trimmed their forecasts for major indicators. They now see consumer prices increasing just 0.7 percent in 2023, down from an earlier projection of 0.9 percent. The consumer price index declined in July for the first time since February 2021.

The weak economic figures have spurred some action by Chinese officials. The People’s Bank of China this month lowered the rate on its one-year loans by the steepest amount in three years. But even with that interest rate cut — the second this year — Beijing has refrained from unleashing massive stimulus implemented in past downturns.

Economists see the PBOC trimming that policy loan rate — called the medium-term lending facility rate — by another 10 basis points in the final three months of the year.

They also projected a 10 basis-point reduction in the five-year loan prime rate, a key rate that guides mortgages. That rate was unexpectedly kept on hold last week, reflecting the government’s difficulty in balancing the need to safeguard the banking system’s stability with trying to boost confidence.

Economists also maintained projections that the central bank would cut the reserve requirement ratio, or the amount of cash lenders have to keep in reserve, by 25 basis points this quarter.

Other key highlights from the survey:

GDP seen expanding 1 percent in the July-to-September period from the prior quarter, down from a projection of 1.2 percent growth in the previous survey

China’s producer prices seen contracting 3 percent for the full year, compared with a prior survey estimate of a 2.7 percent decline

Exports are likely to fall 3 percent in 2023, compared with a 2.3 percent drop in the prior survey

Imports seen declining 5.6 percent this year, compared with a projected 2.8 percent decrease previously

Also Read: Possible 2nd round shock of food price rise on inflation prompted RBI to keep repo unchanged: MPC minutes

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