From Xinhua News Agency, April 18, 2022. Complete text:
Beijing – China’s economy got off to a steady start in 2022 in the face of global challenges and a resurgence of COVID-19 cases.
The country’s gross domestic product (GDP) grew 4.8% year on year to 27.02 trillion RMB (about $4.24 trillion) in the first three months, quickening from a 4% increase in the fourth quarter last year, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) on Monday [April 18].
The economy posted a stable performance and continued recovery as China struck a balance between epidemic control and economic and social development, NBS spokesperson Fu Linghui told a press conference.
After a strong rebound in 2021, China witnessed some unexpected challenges at the beginning of this year, with a volatile global situation and multiple, sporadic COVID-19 outbreaks on the domestic front. Downward economic pressure is on the rise and some major indicators have seen slower increases, according to Fu.
“But the long-term economic fundamentals remain sound and the continued momentum of economic recovery has not changed,” Fu said, emphasizing that the country is confident and capable of overcoming these difficulties.
A breakdown of Monday’s data shows that value-added industrial output posted a stable 6.5% increase from a year ago in the first quarter, and fixed-asset investment jumped 9.3%. Retail sales of consumer goods went up 3.3%.
The surveyed urban unemployment rate stood at 5.5% in January-March, with 2.85 million new urban jobs created in this period.
Braving challenges.
As the Omicron variant has infected over 320,000 people across China since March, a wide range of contact-based sectors from catering to retail have taken a major hit.
In some instances the severity of the situation had surpassed expectations, Fu said, acknowledging that in some hard-hit areas factory production was reduced or suspended and logistics curbed.
But the spokesperson noted China’s targeted, effective epidemic controls will minimize the impact of COVID-19 on the economy. He added that a string of recently unveiled pro-growth measures will help businesses and stabilize the economy.
The central bank announced Friday a cut of 0.25 percentage points in the cash amount banks must hold in reserve. Designed to support the real economy, the move is expected to free up 530 billion RMB in long-term liquidity.
Centrally administered state-owned enterprises have promised to exempt three to six months’ rent for small businesses in the service industry. Tax authorities nationwide in March deferred 256.7 billion RMB of tax payments for micro, small and medium enterprises in the manufacturing sector.
Most recently, at a national teleconference Monday, Chinese Vice Premier Liu He underlined efforts to eliminate obstacles to goods flows across the nation, including creating a “white list” of foreign trade firms and companies in the automobile, medical and other key sectors.
Thanks to the prompt actions, Fu said the industrial production largely remained stable in the first quarter and showed strong resilience.
The production of new energy vehicles, solar panels and industrial robots went up 140.8%, 24.3% and 10.2%, respectively. The output of the high-tech manufacturing sector expanded 14.2%, much higher than the industrial average.
Hard but attainable.
China’s policymakers set the full-year growth target at 5.5% in March, which, given increasing economic headwinds, is still attainable but requires greater efforts, analysts said.
At the press conference, Fu pledged stronger economic and industrial support, especially for manufacturing, micro and small enterprises as well as those hit hardest amid the epidemic. He noted that actions will be taken to ensure energy and raw material supplies and stabilize industrial and supply chains.
The authorities are pushing forward a mass campaign to reduce taxes and fees worth 2.5 trillion RMB this year, which will benefit numerous enterprises, in particular small firms.
Looking into the full year, the spokesperson expressed confidence in the economy, citing favorable conditions including reviving consumption, stronger investment, and innovation-driven industrial upgrades.
Consumption has been restrained by recent epidemic rebounds but the recovery trend will not change and consumption will continue to function as the “ballast stone” of the economy, he said. Final consumption contributed 69.4% to GDP expansion in the first quarter, while investment and exports made up 26.9% and 3.7%, respectively.
Yi David Wang, chief China economist at Credit Suisse Group AG, has recently predicted China’s GDP can grow 5.9% in 2022, driven in part by less-impacted consumption, strong government and corporate investment, and housing investment.